14-Character Password Generator
Generate secure, random 14-character passwords. 92 bits of entropy — strong strength. Everything runs in your browser.
Use ⌘ + D to bookmark this toolGenerate secure, random 14-character passwords. 92 bits of entropy — strong strength. Everything runs in your browser.
Use ⌘ + D to bookmark this toolA 14-character password provides 92 bits of entropy — exceeding the security of most encryption keys used in daily internet browsing. At this length, brute-force attacks become completely impractical even for nation-state adversaries. The crack time of 10 billion years is roughly the current age of the universe.
Entropy is calculated as: length × log₂(pool_size). With 14 characters from the full 95-char printable ASCII set, you get 92 bits of entropy. Brute-force time at 10 billion guesses/sec: 10 billion years.
50 pre-generated examples. Use the generator above for a cryptographically fresh password — these are for illustration only.
Healthcare systems under HIPAA often require 14+ character passwords. PCI-DSS (payment card industry) recommends 12+ but many implementations use 14. Some financial institutions like Fidelity and Schwab require 14+ for advisor accounts. Government systems (FISMA Moderate) typically require 14+ characters.
Patient portals, EHR systems, and healthcare apps contain protected health information (PHI). HIPAA doesn't specify exact password lengths, but 14+ is the common compliance baseline.
Brokerage accounts, crypto exchanges, and trading platforms where unauthorized access could result in immediate financial loss. Always combine with hardware 2FA.
Corporate email accounts with access to sensitive business information, client data, and internal communications. Business email compromise (BEC) is a multi-billion dollar annual fraud.
VPN credentials provide network-level access to corporate resources. A compromised VPN password gives attackers the same access as being physically in the office.
| Length | Entropy | Crack Time (GPU) | Rating | Recommended For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 chars | 39 bits | 3.5 seconds | Weak | temporary or throwaway accounts only |
| 8 chars | 53 bits | 1.3 days | Fair | low-security accounts where the site enforces rate limiting |
| 10 chars | 66 bits | 117 years | Good | general-purpose accounts and social media |
| 12 chars | 79 bits | 1.1 million years | Strong | general accounts |
| 14 chars | 92 bits | 10 billion years | Strong | sensitive accounts |
| 15 chars | 99 bits | 894 billion years | Excellent | business accounts |
| 16 chars | 105 bits | 84 trillion years | Excellent | master passwords |
| 20 chars | 132 bits | 7 × 10²¹ years | Overkill | master passwords |
| 24 chars | 158 bits | 6 × 10²⁹ years | Overkill | maximum security |
| 32 chars | 211 bits | 4 × 10⁴⁵ years | Overkill | encryption keys |
| 48 chars | 316 bits | ∞ | Maximum | cryptographic secrets and machine-to-machine authentication |
| 64 chars | 421 bits | ∞ | Maximum | cryptographic keys |
Crack times assume 10 billion guesses/sec (GPU cluster with MD5). Bcrypt/Argon2 hashing makes these 10,000x–100,000x slower.
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Yes. A 14-character password using uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols provides 92 bits of entropy — well beyond what brute-force attacks can crack. It would take 10 billion years to break with current GPU technology.
With a modern GPU cluster computing 10 billion hashes per second, a random 14-character password using all character types (95-char pool) would take approximately 10 billion years to crack by brute force. Using only lowercase letters would be significantly faster to crack.
Both matter, but length has a greater impact. Each additional character multiplies the total combinations by the pool size (up to 95 for all printable ASCII). However, using all character types (uppercase, lowercase, numbers, symbols) maximizes the pool size, which also multiplies security exponentially.
Yes. You cannot reliably memorize unique random passwords for every account. A password manager securely stores all your passwords behind one strong master password, and can auto-fill them across devices and browsers.
A 14-character password is recommended for: sensitive accounts, banking, and healthcare. Always use the strongest password practical for each account, and never reuse passwords across sites.