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Convertiax

Convert Anything. Instantly.

Password Generator

Password Generator

Create strong passwords with length controls, character options, and quick copy actions.

Password Generator

Create strong passwords with custom length and character controls, then copy the result instantly.

Character sets

Generated password

Generate a password to see it here.

About This Tool

The Convertiax password generator is designed for quick account setup, internal tooling, security hygiene, and temporary credential workflows. Users can choose a custom length and decide whether to include uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols.

The page keeps the main output central so people can regenerate or copy without clutter. It is useful for product teams, administrators, freelancers, and anyone who wants stronger passwords without manually constructing them.

What this tool does

The password generator creates random passwords in the browser with configurable length and character options. It is useful when you need a quick credential for a new account, an internal tool, a temporary project, or a stronger replacement for a weak password.

How to use it step by step

  1. 1.Choose the password length based on the account importance and password manager you use.
  2. 2.Decide whether to include uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols.
  3. 3.Generate a password, then copy it directly into your password manager or account setup screen.
  4. 4.If a system has character restrictions, regenerate with adjusted options instead of editing the password manually.

Password length guidance

Length is one of the easiest ways to improve a password. A longer random password gives an attacker more possible combinations to guess, especially when the value is generated instead of based on names, dates, keyboard patterns, or reused phrases.

  • Use at least 12 to 14 characters for low-risk accounts when a longer password is not practical.
  • Use 16 characters or more for important accounts such as email, hosting, admin dashboards, and financial services.
  • Use longer values when a password manager stores the password and you do not need to type it manually.

Random passwords vs passphrases

Shorter utility password

A 12 to 14 character password can work for low-risk throwaway environments if a password manager stores it.

Q8m!p2Rk#7nA

High-entropy account password

Longer passwords with mixed character types are better for primary email, admin accounts, and financial services.

wR7!Dq2#bY9@Lk4^mZ8$

When a passphrase may help

Passphrases are often easier to type manually, while random high-entropy strings are stronger when stored in a password manager.

When to use symbols, numbers, uppercase, and lowercase

Character variety is useful when it adds real randomness. Symbols, numbers, uppercase letters, and lowercase letters all increase the possible character pool, but they work best when combined with enough length.

  • Use symbols for accounts that support them, especially when the password will be stored in a password manager.
  • Use numbers and uppercase letters as part of a random mix, not as predictable substitutions such as `A` for `a` or `0` for `o`.
  • If a website rejects symbols, increase the length instead of manually simplifying the password.
  • Keep lowercase enabled unless a system has unusual restrictions, because removing a character group reduces the possible combinations.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Do not reuse one generated password across multiple important services.
  • Do not store copied passwords in plain notes if a password manager is available.
  • Do not remove symbols or length without checking whether you are weakening a high-risk login.
  • Do not build passwords from personal details, company names, birthdays, pet names, or predictable keyboard paths.

Why password reuse is risky

Password reuse turns one breach into many possible account takeovers. If a password is exposed on one service, attackers may try the same email and password combination on email providers, stores, banks, social platforms, hosting dashboards, and business tools.

Unique passwords reduce that chain reaction. Even if one site has a security incident, a different password on every important account helps limit the damage.

Safety best practices

  • Use unique passwords for your email, hosting, banking, and admin accounts.
  • Prefer long random passwords when a password manager handles the typing for you.
  • Turn on multi-factor authentication whenever the service supports it.
  • Copy generated passwords directly into the destination field or password manager, then clear your clipboard if the device is shared.
  • Regenerate instead of editing a password by hand when a site has special character rules.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I control the password length?

Yes. You can choose a custom password length before generating.

Can I include symbols or numbers?

Yes. Each character type can be toggled independently.

Is the password generated in the browser?

Yes. The generation logic runs locally in the browser.

How long should a strong password be?

For important accounts, 16 or more random characters is a practical baseline, especially when stored in a password manager.

Are symbols always required?

Symbols help when they are allowed, but length and randomness matter more than adding predictable substitutions.

Why should I avoid password reuse?

If one reused password is exposed, attackers may try it on other accounts. Unique passwords limit that risk.