Password Generator

Password Generator — Strong Random Passwords

Set your password length, pick what to include (uppercase, lowercase, numbers, symbols), pass reCAPTCHA, and click Generate. You’ll instantly get a new password you can copy. Simple, fast, and free to use.

Key benefits

  • Strong by design: Mix character types for better security.
  • Flexible: Choose the exact length and character set you want.
  • One‑click result: Generate and copy the password in seconds.
  • No login: Use it right away; reCAPTCHA helps prevent abuse.
  • Works anywhere: Clean, mobile‑friendly interface.

How it works

  1. Set Password Length.
  2. Select options: Include Uppercase, Lowercase, Numbers, and/or Symbols.
  3. Complete the “I’m not a robot” reCAPTCHA.
  4. Click Generate to create your password.
  5. Copy it from “Your New Password.”

You might be wondering which options to choose. A balanced mix of all four types usually gives you the strongest result. By the way, longer passwords are harder to guess—use the longest length that’s practical for you.

Features

  • Password Length input (default visible value: 6 in the UI).
  • Character options:
    • Include Uppercase Text
    • Include Lowercase Text
    • Include Numbers
    • Include Symbols
  • reCAPTCHA “I’m not a robot” check.
  • Generate button to create the password.
  • Output field labeled “Your New Password” with a copy icon.

Supported inputs, outputs, and limits

  • Inputs: Length; checkboxes for uppercase/lowercase/numbers/symbols.
  • Output: One generated password shown in the output field; copy icon available.
  • Limits/ranges: Not specified on the page.

Example

  • Input: Length 16; all four options selected.
  • Action: Pass reCAPTCHA and click Generate.
  • Output: A 16‑character password mixing uppercase, lowercase, digits, and symbols, ready to copy.

Who it’s for

  • Creators, developers, and admins — quick strong passwords for accounts and dev tools.
  • Teams and students — generate unique passwords for shared and test accounts.
  • Anyone who wants a fast, secure, copy‑ready password without installing software.

Pros and cons

  • Pros: Fast, simple UI; flexible options; copy output; free; reCAPTCHA protection.
  • Cons: Page doesn’t list minimum/maximum length or advanced rules; no history/export.

 

Best practices — strong vs weak passwords

You might be wondering what “strong” really means. In plain words: a strong password is long, random, and unique to one account. A weak password is short, predictable, reused, or based on your personal info. Here’s the quick guide you can add right under the generator.

What makes a strong password

  • Length first: 16+ characters for personal accounts; 20–32 for admin, finance, or email.
  • Mix it up: uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols.
  • No patterns: avoid keyboard walks (qwerty, 123456), doubles (aa11), or obvious replacements (P@ssw0rd).
  • One and only one: never reuse a password on different sites.
  • Prefer passphrases when allowed: four to five random words plus separators, e.g., “river-blanket-ozone-M7!”.

What makes a weak password

  • Short: anything under 10–12 characters is easy to brute‑force today.
  • Predictable: names, birthdays, pet names, sports teams, “iloveyou”, “admin”, or “welcome”.
  • Common patterns: “Summer2025!”, “CompanyName123!”, “Abc12345”, “Qwerty123!”.
  • Reuse: the same password used across email, bank, and social accounts.
  • Small tweaks to old ones: “Password1” → “Password2” is still weak.

Strong examples (do use these patterns, not these exact strings)

  • 16+ random mix: “V7n!pD2z#qL9rX@1”
  • Passphrase style: “cactus-lava-bicycle-42!Moon”
  • Admin‑level length: “N4$gK7tQ2!vR0xH9#eU5”

Weak examples (don’t use)

  • “12345678”, “password”, “qwerty123”
  • “John1995!”, “Liverpool2025!”, “Welcome1”
  • “Passw0rd!”, “Summer2025!”, “Company123!”

Recommended settings in this tool

  • Everyday accounts: Length 16, include Uppercase, Lowercase, Numbers, Symbols.
  • Sensitive accounts (email, banking): Length 20–24, include all character types.
  • Admin/API/servers: Length 24–32, include all character types; rotate only when needed (compromise, staff change, or policy).

Passphrases vs complex strings

  • Passphrases are easier to remember if a site allows long passwords and spaces/symbols.
  • Complex random strings are best when you’ll save them in a password manager and rarely type them.

Storage and safety tips

  • Use a reputable password manager; don’t store passwords in notes or spreadsheets.
  • Turn on 2‑step/2‑factor authentication (authenticator app > SMS).
  • Never share passwords over email or chat. If you must share temporarily, use one‑time secret links and then change it.
  • Change passwords after a breach, phishing incident, or when access no longer needs to be shared. Routine monthly rotation without cause can lead to weaker habits.

By the way, here’s the cool thing: with this generator, you can create long, unique passwords for every site in seconds—no mental gymnastics needed.

FAQs

Is it free?

Yes—free to use; no login is shown.

Can I control what characters appear?

Yes—toggle uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols.

Is there a copy button?

Yes—use the copy icon next to “Your New Password.”

Do I have to pass reCAPTCHA?

Yes—reCAPTCHA is shown before generating the password.

What length should I pick?

Use the longest length you can reasonably store and type; the page does not list an official recommendation.

What length should I use for a strong password?


Aim for at least 16 characters; use 20–32 for sensitive or admin accounts.Q: Are passphrases better than complex strings?

Are passphrases better than complex strings?


Both can be strong. Use long, random passphrases when allowed; use random mixed‑character strings when you’ll store them in a password manager.

Should I change my passwords every month?


Change them after a breach, suspected phishing, or when access needs change. Forced frequent rotation can lead to weaker choices.

Is “Summer2025!” strong?


No. Seasonal words with a year and an exclamation mark are common and easy to guess.

Trust and privacy

  • Security controls shown: Google reCAPTCHA to reduce abuse.
  • Data handling: The page does not state storage/retention details. No additional privacy notes are displayed here.

 

Related: Password Strength Checker, QR Code Generator

 

Best for: Quickly creating strong, random passwords you can copy.

Steps: Set length → Choose uppercase/lowercase/numbers/symbols → reCAPTCHA → Generate → Copy.

Outputs: One random password.

Free: Yes — no login shown.

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