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Passphrase Word Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A passphrase word generator creates secure, memorable credentials by chaining random common English words — the approach NIST recommends over complex character-based passwords. A passphrase like 'correct-horse-battery-staple' is longer, higher-entropy, and far easier to recall than 'X7#kQ2!'. Four random words drawn from a large vocabulary produce around 51–53 bits of entropy, already stronger than most 8-character passwords. Add a fifth and you're well beyond realistic brute-force range. This tool lets you set word count and choose your separator: hyphen, space, underscore, or a digit. That separator choice matters — picking a number satisfies sites requiring mixed character types without sacrificing readability.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Set the word count slider to 4 for general use, or 5-6 for master passwords and encryption keys.
- Choose a separator from the dropdown — use hyphen for readability, a digit or symbol to meet site complexity requirements.
- Click Generate to produce a random passphrase from the common English word pool.
- Read the result aloud once or write it on paper to commit it to memory before closing the tab.
- Copy the passphrase and paste it into your password field, then store it in a password manager as a backup.
Use Cases
- •Creating a Bitwarden or 1Password master password you must recall without a hint
- •Setting a Wi-Fi passphrase guests can read off a printed sign without mistyping
- •Generating an SSH key passphrase you type manually several times a day
- •Producing a memorable recovery passphrase for a GPG-encrypted backup archive
- •Creating shared team credentials that staff can relay clearly over a phone call
Tips
- →Use 6 words instead of 4 for any password you will not store in a manager — the extra words cost nothing to type after a few repetitions.
- →If a site rejects your passphrase, switch the separator to a digit like '2' rather than restructuring the whole phrase — it usually satisfies numeric requirements instantly.
- →Test memorability by covering the screen and typing the passphrase from memory immediately after generating; if you can't, generate a new one rather than modifying words manually.
- →Avoid capitalizing the first word only — attackers assume that pattern. Capitalize a middle word or none at all to preserve entropy.
- →For Wi-Fi passwords you'll share verbally, set the separator to a space and word count to 4 — natural-sounding phrases like 'river cloud fence lamp' are easy to dictate without spelling out characters.
- →Regenerate without hesitation if two words in the passphrase rhyme or follow an obvious pattern — memorable coincidences can make guessing easier.
FAQ
how secure is a 4-word passphrase compared to a regular password
A four-word passphrase drawn from a large word pool produces around 51–53 bits of entropy — stronger than a random 8-character password and resistant to offline brute-force with current hardware. Bump to six words and you reach roughly 77 bits, which is considered overkill for most real-world threats.
is it safe to generate a passphrase in a browser tool
This generator runs entirely in your browser; nothing is sent to a server or logged anywhere. You can confirm this by going offline and generating — it still works. For ultra-sensitive cases like hardware wallet seeds, prefer a dedicated offline tool, but for everyday credentials a browser-based generator is safe.
what separator should I pick for my passphrase
Hyphens are the easiest to type and read across devices. If a site requires a digit or special character, choose a number or symbol as your separator — for example 'wolf3table3summit3fence' — and you satisfy most complexity rules without restructuring anything. Avoid spaces in older web forms, as some systems strip them silently.