Proton limited-time offer : Buy Proton Pass Premium for 200$ (for life)

Seems a bit expensive, it like equals 5-6 year of PP subscruption. This offers ends on December 4.

For those wondering, this would pay off after almost 6 years.

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Yup, even probably closer to 5 with inflation.

It’s 5,574136008 to be exact, so it’s probably lower than 5 if we account for inflation.

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If you buy this but currently use a package that also included Pass is there any sort of discount?

EDIT: found the answer

If you have time remaining on your plan, you’ll receive prorated credit to your account, which can then be used for any other Proton purchase (e.g., for Mail Plus, VPN Plus, etc.). Any credit you receive cannot be applied to your Pass Lifetime purchase.

If you currently have a paid Proton plan (e.g. Mail Plus, Drive Plus, VPN Plus, Proton Unlimited, Proton Duo, Pass Family, Proton Family, Visionary) and you get Pass Lifetime, nothing will change about your existing plan. It will renew at the normal price on your renewal date.

So it doesn’t seem like you would save any money if you are going to be paying for a bundle with pass included in it anyway.

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I have a $12 package, which is already very cheap. If someone with this package can also purchase the family package for $36 for 6 users, it turns out to be even cheaper and much better than this package.

Yes, for those who are paying $12 per year, these $200 would only pay off after over 16,5 years.

Having this package and upgrading to the family package will not help me reduce the price to below $36, so this package won’t be beneficial to me in the future.

Is SimpleLogin included?

It does.

No, it’s only included with Proton Unlimited.

The latest information has confirmed the integration.
If you have ProtonPass lifetime, you also own Simplelogin lifetime.

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It is, however keep in mind that both of the services might merge in the future, leaving you with Pass with aliases.

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For a moment I thought it was Proton Unlimited for life like they did in 2014.

I just got the lifetime subscription, primarily for SimpleLogin Premium rather than Proton Pass. However, this could also motivate me to transition from 1Password to Proton Pass in future.

Has this been explicitly stated somewhere? I don’t see it in Proton’s official promotion of the deal or your link.

Can you confirm that somewhere in the purchase process it was explicitly confirmed that full SimpleLogin for life is granted with the SL lifetime deal?

Like you, my interest in the deal is mostly limited to SimpleLogin, I don’t really have a need for a new password manager. But if there is a lifetime offer for fully featured SL premium, I might jump on that.

For $200, you get Proton Pass Plus for as long as Proton exists, and SimpleLogin is bundled with Proton Pass Plus, so yes, you get both.

You are correct that the standard pricing/subscription includes SL Premium. But it isn’t uncommon for lifetime deals, promos, or ‘black friday’ deals to have their own terms and conditions, caveats, or limitations.

So while I suspect everyone is correct in assuming that @Proton_Team’s lifetime Proton Pass offer would also include SL premium for life, I would prefer explicit confirmation that this is the case.

The site says

a Pass Plus subscription now includes SimpleLogin Premium

here

What is Pass Lifetime?

Pass Lifetime is an exclusive offer that gives you access to Pass Plus forever, for a one-time payment of $199.

The plan gives you all current and future Pass Plus features

here

This seems pretty explicit.

Your read is mostly likely correct, but it is only explicit for the non-lifetime subscription (your first link)

And only implied but not explicitly stated that it applies to the lifetime promo offer (your second link)

By explicit I mean positively stating something fully and clearly. (“This promotion grants a lifetime subscription to Proton Pass and to Simple Login Premium” or something to that effect") Most likely this is the case, but I just want an explicit confirmation.

Overly cautious/skeptical read on my part? Yes, almost certainly. But for an upfront, non-refundable purchase, certainty seems preferable to near certainty.