Keeper Security, which offers a zero-trust and zero-knowledge identity security and Privileged Access Management (PAM) platform, has announced KeeperDB.
KeeperDB is a vault-embedded database access capability designed to enable secure, policy-controlled database interactions directly from the Keeper Vault.
Access is governed by centralised policies and fully recorded for audit and compliance purposes.
KeeperDB also enables users to launch database sessions directly from a database record in the Keeper Vault, with the option to connect through either a Graphical User Interface (GUI) or Command-Line Interface (CLI). Initial support includes MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle and Microsoft SQL Server.
Organisations that continue to rely on existing database clients will be able to use KeeperDB in conjunction with the KeeperDB Proxy, which enables secure connections through Keeper while maintaining centralised policy enforcement, credential protection and session visibility.
“Database access has historically been one of the most used yet least-governed areas of enterprise security,” said Darren Guccione, CEO and co-founder of Keeper Security.
“KeeperDB brings database management into the vault – allowing organizations to apply the same zero-trust controls, visibility and auditing they rely on for privileged access – without introducing new tools, credentials or attack paths.”
So far this year, Keeper has launched integrations with Atlassian's Jira; unveiled its 2026 MSP Partner Program; and expanded its distribution channel with Ingram Micro Australia.




