PASSWIZARD.NET

Password Generator

Military-grade entropy, generated locally in your browser.

Read the full security guide
Active key sequence
Crypto ready

Your password will appear here

Length parameter

32 chars
063564
Count

Character set

Choose which character classes are allowed in the password.

Presets

One click applies settings.

Edge computation

Generated entirely in-browser — nothing leaves your device.

Zero logging

Non-persistent states; we do not store your passwords.

Standards aligned

Unbiased sampling and NIST-inspired password guidance.

Password Manager – Your Keys to Digital Security

A password manager makes digital life easier, more secure, and stress-free. It creates strong passwords, remembers them for you, and automatically fills them in – on all your devices. Learn here exactly how it works and what specific benefits you'll gain.

Learn More

What are Password Leaks and Data Breaches?

Password leaks and data breaches are security incidents where personal or confidential information – such as passwords, email addresses, or credit card data – falls into the wrong hands, either unintentionally or through criminal attacks.

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Two-Factor Authentication: Your Digital Bodyguard

Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) is not just an additional security layer – it's a revolution in cybersecurity. While passwords are compromised in 81% of all data breaches, 2FA attacks reduce cybercriminals' success rate by 99.9%. This comprehensive analysis shows why 2FA is essential and how to use it optimally.

Learn More
Generator Methodology

What is a password generator?

A password generator is a tool that produces strong, random passwords using cryptographically secure random number generators. Unlike human-chosen passwords, generated passwords contain no predictable patterns, personal information or dictionary words — which makes them resistant to brute-force and dictionary attacks.

  • Cryptographic randomness via the Web Crypto API — not Math.random().
  • Runs entirely in your browser — nothing is sent to a server.
  • NIST-aligned: long, unique and high-entropy passwords.

Cryptographic Randomness

Uses the Web Crypto API for true random numbers, not pseudo-random numbers like Math.random(). This meets standards for banking and government applications.

Entropy Calculation

Each character set contributes to entropy: uppercase (26), lowercase (26), numbers (10), symbols (32). A 12-character password with all sets has 94^12 ≈ 4.7 × 10^23 combinations.

Security Validation

Passwords are validated against common patterns and dictionary attacks. No sequential characters, repeated patterns, or weak combinations are generated.

Standards aligned

Criteria for strong passwords

A strong password is more than random characters. These six criteria determine how resistant a password is to modern attacks:

01

Length

The longer a password is, the harder it is to crack (e.g., by brute-force attacks). A password should be at least 12 characters long.

02

Complexity

Use a combination of uppercase letters (A-Z), lowercase letters (a-z), numbers (0-9), and special characters (!, @, #, $, %, etc.).

03

No personal information

No name, date of birth, place of residence, or simple keyboard patterns like 123456, qwerty, password, admin, hello123.

04

No reused password

Use a unique password for each website/service. If one service is compromised, the others are not automatically at risk.

05

Regular updates

Passwords should be changed regularly – especially when suspecting a data breach.

06

Password manager

Use a password manager that stores secure random passwords (e.g., in the browser).

Examples and Comparisons

Weak vs. strong passwords

The difference between a weak and a strong password is measured in orders of magnitude of time. Here are real examples:

Weak (do not use)

  • password123
  • admin
  • 12345678
  • qwerty123
  • myName2024

These passwords can be cracked in seconds. 'password123' appears in over 5 million data leaks.

Strong (generator output)

  • K9#mP2@vL8&nR
  • F$7wQ4!xN9^bT
  • H@2kM5#pS8&vX

These passwords have an entropy of 78.6 bits and would take 1.7 million years to crack at 10 billion attempts/second.

Related tools

Complete your security setup

Combine these free tools for end-to-end protection. Everything runs locally or with strict privacy guarantees.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently asked questions

The most common questions about password security — check all answers on our FAQ page.

Why should I use a password generator?

Humans are bad at producing true randomness. Even 'creative' passwords follow predictable patterns and are vulnerable to dictionary and brute‑force attacks. A cryptographic generator creates passwords with true randomness and mathematically provable security.

How secure are the generated passwords?

Our passwords use the Web Crypto API for cryptographically secure random numbers. A 12‑character password with all character sets has 78.6 bits of entropy and would take about 1.7 million years to crack at 10 billion attempts per second. This meets banking and government security standards.

Can I use the same password for multiple websites?

No – that's extremely risky. If one service suffers a breach, attackers can try your password on all other accounts. Every website should have a unique, strong password. Use a password manager to handle hundreds of unique passwords.

How often should I change my passwords?

Guidance has changed: instead of frequent rotation without cause, change passwords when compromise is suspected. Focus on strong, unique passwords and two‑factor authentication. For critical accounts (banking, email) every 90 days.

Read all FAQs

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