Text
Random Acronym & Abbreviation Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A random acronym and abbreviation generator solves a specific problem designers and developers hit constantly: placeholder text that breaks immersion. Generic stand-ins like 'ORG_NAME' signal an unfinished design and pull stakeholders out of the experience you're trying to evaluate. This tool produces plausible-sounding abbreviations paired with convincing full names, tailored to six domains — government, tech, medical, finance, military, or any. Set the domain and the generator adjusts both the letter patterns and the vocabulary behind them. Military outputs lean toward command structures; medical results read like diagnostic protocols. Generate up to a batch at once and you have enough variety to populate nav labels, status badges, table headers, and dropdown values across an entire prototype without reusing the same three fakes.
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Set the Count field to the number of acronyms you need — start with 10 for a full mockup screen.
- Select a Domain from the dropdown that matches your project context (e.g. 'medical' for a hospital app).
- Click Generate to produce a list of abbreviations, each paired with its invented full name.
- Scan the results and regenerate any that feel too generic or don't fit the tone of your project.
- Copy the acronyms you want and paste them directly into your design file, doc, or naming spreadsheet.
Use Cases
- •Populating navigation labels and badge text in a government portal Figma prototype
- •Seeding realistic department names into a hospital management UI for usability testing
- •Filling status-code fields and system identifiers in a military dashboard demo
- •Generating fake regulatory body names for fintech compliance screens in Storybook
- •Brainstorming early B2B SaaS product name candidates using the 'any' domain output
Tips
- →Generate with 'any' domain first to spot unexpected combinations, then switch to a specific domain to refine the style.
- →For multi-screen prototypes, generate a large batch at once and assign acronyms to specific UI roles (nav, badge, table header) before designing — consistency prevents client confusion.
- →If a generated abbreviation looks right but the full name feels weak, keep the letters and use them as a prompt to write your own expansion using the same domain vocabulary.
- →Three-to-four letter acronyms read most naturally in nav and badge contexts; use five-to-six letter outputs for system or protocol identifiers where verbosity signals complexity.
- →Military and government domains produce the most distinctive outputs for fintech mockups too — regulatory body names often borrow that structural authority regardless of industry.
- →Save a running list of your favourite generated acronyms across projects; a strong-sounding abbreviation you didn't use in one mockup often fits perfectly in the next.
FAQ
can I use a generated acronym as a real product or company name
You can use them as a starting point, but run a trademark search and check for existing organisations using the same abbreviation before committing. Short abbreviations overlap heavily with registered entities, so check USPTO's TESS database and do a basic web search as a minimum before any commercial use.
why use realistic acronyms in UI mockups instead of generic placeholders
Placeholders like 'DEPT_1' signal an unfinished design and shift stakeholder attention away from the layout and flow you actually want feedback on. Domain-appropriate acronyms maintain immersion so reviews stay focused on usability rather than the stand-in text.
do the generated full names follow real naming conventions for each domain
Yes — government outputs favour constructions like 'Office of' and 'Bureau of'; medical results use clinical and departmental vocabulary; military outputs include operational and command terminology. They won't match any real entity, but they follow the structural grammar of each category closely enough to pass scrutiny in a prototype.