Password Generator
Create memorable passwords made from real words plus numbers. Adjust options to fit your preference for ease of entry and strength.
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Why use a passphrase?
Short, complex passwords are hard to remember and easy to mistype. A passphrase uses a few real words plus numbers to create something that is both strong and easy to enter on any device. Longer phrases provide significantly more search space than short strings with symbols.
Best practices
- Use a unique passphrase for every account — never reuse.
- Store credentials in a reputable password manager; only memorize a few critical ones.
- Prefer length over exotic symbols; 3–5 words plus digits is a good baseline.
- Enable two‑factor authentication (2FA) wherever possible.
- Avoid personal words (names, birthdays, addresses) that are easy to guess.
Password managers
A password manager lets you generate and autofill unique credentials for every site. Use a strong master passphrase and protect the vault with 2FA. For shared accounts, use the manager’s sharing features instead of sending passwords over chat or email.
When to use passphrases
- Frequently typed passwords (e.g., device logins) where memorability matters.
- Master passwords for password managers or encryption tools.
- Wi‑Fi keys that guests may need to type on phones or TVs.
Security notes
- This generator runs entirely in your browser; words and results are not sent to a server.
- For sensitive accounts, increase words or digits and always enable 2FA.
- Rotate credentials after compromise or when shared broadly.