Password Tool

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60 country, region and worldwide versions · Search local and English names RTL: עברית / العربية · passwords remain LTR

Password Generator for Banking

Generate a long local password for banking logins while avoiding false guarantees about financial account security.

Generated locally · never uploaded or saved

Generated passwords

Default 10 characters · 10 passwords · uppercase + lowercase + numbers

Transparent local analysis

Randomness and character distribution

This chart summarizes the current generated batch without exposing its password text. A small sample cannot prove random-number quality.

Randomness and character distribution
Sample size0
Theoretical entropy ceiling
Uppercase0
Lowercase0
Numbers0
Symbols0
Repeated passphrase words0

The ceiling assumes the selected generator model is uniform. It is not a guarantee for a reused, human-chosen, or exposed password.

Local security workspace

Session-only generation history and export

This panel keeps only batch metadata in session storage. Password text stays in memory and is exported only if you explicitly choose it.

Warning: exported files may contain sensitive passwords. Save them only in a trusted location.

Recent local batches

Recent local batches
TimeModeCountLengthEntropy

Generate a password batch to see local metadata here.

Local security check

Password crack time estimator

See how common words, patterns, and length affect an estimated attack time.

Evaluated only in this browser. Never uploaded, logged, or saved.

Estimated time · offline fast hash (10 billion guesses/second)

Enter a password to estimate

Compare four attack scenarios
Online, rate limited (100/hour)
Online, no rate limit (10/second)
Offline, slow hash (10,000/second)
Offline, fast hash (10 billion/second)

Estimate only—not a guarantee. Actual time depends on password storage, hashing cost, attacker hardware, and whether the password is reused or exposed.

About this generator

This preset uses a long random password for high-value financial logins and pairs it with practical advice about MFA, phishing, and recovery.

This preset starts with characters mode and generates 10 independent results at a time. Every visible setting remains adjustable, and generated values are not sent to PwdGen.

When to use it

  • Banking portals
  • Brokerage logins
  • Financial dashboards stored in a password manager

Alphabet size, entropy, and brute-force assumptions

The theoretical entropy ceiling is calculated as H = L × log2(A), where L is the generated length and A is the number of currently permitted characters.

LengthAlphabetSearch spaceEntropy ceilingAverage at 10 billion guesses/s
32686832194.8 bits6.92e40 years

Important: these are mathematical estimates for uniformly random values. Required positions, restricted counts, repeated passwords, dictionary patterns, leaked credentials, and real password-hashing costs can change the result substantially. The figure is not a security guarantee.

How to use the result safely

  1. Use the longest value the bank accepts
  2. Enable the strongest MFA offered
  3. Verify URLs before signing in
Important limitation: This is general security guidance, not financial advice. Account safety also depends on the bank, recovery paths, fraud monitoring, and your device.

Generation and privacy method

The preset uses the browser Web Crypto API for random selection. Regenerating, changing settings, selecting, and copying results do not send generated credentials to PwdGen. The password crack-time estimator also runs locally and is an estimate, not a guarantee.

Password Generator for Banking FAQ

What password length is sensible for a banking account?

Use the longest unique random password the service accepts. A 20–32 character password is a practical target for important accounts when a password manager is available.

Does PwdGen send the password to banking?

No. PwdGen is independent of banking. The password is generated locally in your browser and is not submitted to the named service.

Should I also enable MFA or passkeys?

Yes. A strong password protects one layer. MFA or passkeys can reduce account-takeover risk when supported and recovery methods are also protected.

Where should I store the result?

Save it in a trusted password manager. Do not paste it into notes, email drafts, tickets, source code, or shared chat history.