How to create a strong password
Forget "P@ssw0rd1". The strongest passwords are long, unique, and easy for you to remember. Here is how to make them.
Length beats complexity
For years we were told to use passwords like P@ssw0rd! - short but "complex." It turns out that is backwards. Modern password cracking chews through short passwords quickly, no matter how many symbols they contain. What actually defeats it is length. A long passphrase is both stronger and easier to remember.
How to build a strong password
- Use a passphrase. Four or five random words make a great password:
copper-violin-cloud-37-rain. It is long, memorable, and hard to guess. Aim for at least 15 characters. - Make every important password unique. Reusing one password means a single breach unlocks all your accounts. (See what to do when a password is breached.)
- Avoid the obvious. Names, birthdays, pets, sports teams, and
123456are the first things attackers try. - Do not just swap letters for symbols.
P@ssw0rdis no stronger thanpassword- cracking tools know every trick.
Let a password manager do the work
You cannot remember a unique 16-character password for 100 accounts - and you should not try. A password manager creates and stores strong, unique passwords for every site, so you only remember one strong master passphrase. See trustworthy free and open-source options on our Safe Software page.
Two more essentials
- Turn on two-factor authentication. Even a perfect password can leak; 2FA adds a second lock.
- Check whether your password has leaked. If a password has appeared in a known breach, it is unsafe no matter how strong it looks. Test yours privately with our Password Checker - it never sends your actual password.
Strong, unique, and backed by 2FA: get those three right and you are ahead of most attacks.