Your password:

PandaRiver47

11 characters · Good for school accounts, email

Choose how strong

Pick the kinds of words to use

Tick at least one. The generator picks words from a curated, child-safe wordlist of about 240 words.
Up to 35 (typical UK class size).

    CSV is ready to paste into your MIS, Active Directory, or Microsoft 365 bulk import. Email is convenient for internal/temporary delivery — pair with a forced password change on first login. Both are generated locally on your device.

    Looking after several family accounts?

    A family password manager remembers a unique strong password for every account — for everyone in the house — so children don't have to. Disclosure: the links below are affiliate links — we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

    Why use a kid-safe generator?

    For parents

    Children inherit poor password habits from the adults around them — same word, same number, written on a Post-it. A simple, fun generator that produces something both memorable and different every time breaks that pattern early. The Medium and Strong settings here produce passwords that comfortably exceed what most school IT systems require.

    For teachers

    Setting up 30 pupil accounts on a Monday morning shouldn't take an hour. The bulk mode generates a full class of unique, kid-friendly passwords in one click and exports a CSV ready for your MIS, Microsoft 365 bulk import, or Active Directory. Strong mode is aligned with UK Cyber Essentials v3.3 (12+ characters), so school audits stay clean.

    Teaching kids the password basics

    Three rules that cover 95% of the risk for children online:

    1. Never the same password twice. If one site loses your password, no other account is at risk. This is the single most important rule — bigger than length, complexity, or anything else.
    2. Never tell anyone your password. Not friends, not "the helpful person on the game", not someone who messages saying they work for the company. Trusted adults at home are the only exception.
    3. Write important ones down at home. Not on a sticky note at school, not in a school exercise book — somewhere safe at home, like inside a notebook in a drawer. Or use a family password manager.

    Want a longer guide? Read the full parent & teacher guide →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Yes. The wordlists are curated to remove anything that could combine into something rude or upsetting, and the words are deliberately short and easy to type. For school accounts, use the Medium or Strong setting — the resulting passwords meet typical school IT password requirements.

    Easy is fine for low-stakes things like games and apps. Medium is right for most school accounts and email. Strong (3 words plus a number and symbol) is recommended for important accounts and meets UK Cyber Essentials password requirements (12+ characters).

    Yes — tick the "Bulk mode (for teachers)" box, choose the number of pupils (up to 35), and click Generate. You can then export the list as a CSV file ready to paste into your school management system, Microsoft 365 bulk import, or Active Directory.

    No. Generation happens entirely in your browser using JavaScript and the secure crypto.getRandomValues() API. Nothing is sent to any server, logged, or stored. Even when you export a class list, the file is created locally on your device.

    For older children with several accounts, yes — a family password manager is the safest way to keep track. For younger children, writing the password down at home (kept somewhere safe, not at school) and asking a parent to help is reasonable. The most important rule is to never use the same password for more than one account.

    The wordlist contains around 240 words across six themes (animals, nature, food, things, colours, actions). Every word has been individually checked, and word combinations have been reviewed to make sure no two-word or three-word combination produces something embarrassing or upsetting. If you spot anything that should be removed, please email [email protected].