Introduction
This Password Generator helps you create random passwords, word-based passphrases, and numeric PINs in one place. It is useful for website logins, password manager vaults, app setup, recovery codes, test accounts, and any workflow where you need secure credentials without sending them to a remote server.
How to Use
Choose the generator mode that fits your task first. In password mode, set the length, turn character groups on or off, and decide how many numbers or symbols must appear. In passphrase mode, choose the word count, separator, capitalization, and whether to add a trailing number. In PIN mode, choose the number of digits. Generate a single result or a batch, then copy the output or download it as a TXT file.
Features
- •Three credential modes: random password, memorable passphrase, and numeric PIN
- •Adjustable length, character sets, minimum numbers, and minimum symbols for strict site rules
- •Ambiguous-character filtering for easier manual entry and verification
- •Batch output with copy-all and TXT download for setup, testing, and admin workflows
- •Local browser processing with no server upload
Which Mode Should You Choose?
Random passwords are usually the best choice for website accounts because they can mix uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols. Passphrases are easier to remember and can work well for password managers, vault unlocks, and other places where memorability matters. PIN mode is mainly for numeric-only scenarios such as device unlocks, temporary access codes, or fields that reject symbols.
Character Rules and Site Compatibility
Some services require a minimum length, at least one number, or at least one symbol. Others reject spaces, separators, or certain punctuation marks. That is why the generator lets you turn character groups on or off, set minimum counts, and choose whether to remove similar-looking characters such as 0 and O. If a website has strict password requirements, random password mode is usually the safest option.
Why Passphrases Use Short English Words
This tool uses short English words for passphrases because they are broadly compatible with apps, websites, and password managers. A multi-word passphrase can be easier to type and remember than a dense string of symbols, but it may not fit every login form. If a service blocks spaces or separators, switch to password mode or choose a different separator such as a hyphen or underscore.
Local Processing and Safety Notes
All generation happens in your browser. The tool does not need to send the output to an API, which makes it practical for private setup work and day-to-day credential management. You should still store important passwords in a trusted password manager, and you should not assume that a short PIN offers the same protection as a long password or passphrase.
Mode Selection Guide
Use this table to choose the right credential type for your task.
| Mode | Best for | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Password | Website logins and account credentials | Best when a site has strict character requirements |
| Passphrase | Vault unlocks, manager master passwords, memorable secrets | Easier to remember, but some sites reject spaces or separators |
| PIN | Numeric-only fields, devices, temporary codes | Convenient, but usually weaker than a full password at the same length |
Password Rule Checklist
Common rule controls you may need when matching service requirements.
| Setting | Why it matters | When to use it |
|---|---|---|
| Length | Longer output increases the search space | Raise it for stronger account passwords |
| Minimum numbers | Meets numeric requirements | Useful when a site requires at least one digit |
| Minimum symbols | Meets punctuation requirements | Useful when a site requires special characters |
| Avoid ambiguous characters | Improves readability | Helpful when you must type the result manually |
Frequently Asked Questions
Are the generated passwords uploaded anywhere?
No. The generator works locally in your browser, so the output is not sent to a remote server during normal use.
When should I use a passphrase instead of a random password?
Use a passphrase when memorability matters, such as for a vault unlock or a master password. Use a random password when a website has strict character rules or when you want the widest compatibility.
What does avoiding ambiguous characters mean?
It removes characters that can look too similar at a glance, such as 0 and O or 1 and l, which makes copying from paper or manual typing safer.
Can I generate multiple results at once?
Yes. You can create a batch of passwords, passphrases, or PINs and then copy the full list or download it as a text file.
Is a PIN as strong as a password?
Usually not. A PIN has a much smaller search space because it uses digits only, so it is best reserved for numeric-only situations.