Generate Easy to Type Password

Generate a password that avoids confusing characters (0/O, 1/l/I) for easier typing.

Last updated: April 6, 2026

Password Generator

Generate a easy to type password with our free tool. Click the link below to open the password generator pre-configured for easy to type passwords.

Password Settings

Length16 characters
Character TypesA-Z, a-z, 0-9
UppercaseYes
LowercaseYes
NumbersYes
SymbolsNo

About Easy to Type Passwords

Easy-to-type passwords avoid visually ambiguous characters like 0/O, 1/l/I, and hard-to-reach symbols. This is useful for passwords that must be entered manually on different devices.

Security Tip

Even with a reduced character set, 16+ characters provides strong security.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which characters are removed from easy-to-type passwords and why?
Easy-to-type generators typically exclude visually ambiguous characters: zero (0) vs letter O, one (1) vs lowercase L (l) vs uppercase I, and five (5) vs letter S. They also skip hard-to-reach symbols that require Shift+number combos. This reduces typing errors when entering passwords on unfamiliar keyboards or reading them from a screen.
When should I use an easy-to-type password instead of a fully random one?
Use easy-to-type passwords when you need to enter them manually on devices without autofill: smart TVs, game consoles, kiosk computers, or when dictating a password over the phone. For accounts where your password manager handles entry automatically, use a fully random password for maximum entropy.
Does removing ambiguous characters significantly weaken the password?
Removing 8-10 ambiguous characters from a 62-character alphanumeric set reduces entropy by about 0.7 bits per character. At 16 characters, this means roughly 11 fewer bits of total entropy compared to a standard alphanumeric password. This is a minor trade-off that is easily compensated by adding 2-3 extra characters to the password length.
Are easy-to-type passwords suitable for shared workplace computers?
Yes, this is one of their best use cases. When employees need to type passwords on shared terminals, point-of-sale systems, or manufacturing floor computers where password managers cannot be installed, easy-to-type passwords reduce login errors and support calls. Pair them with frequent rotation and individual user accounts rather than shared credentials.

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Reviewed by

Md. Tanjil

Technical Team Lead

Sharetasking IncPort St Lucie, FL, USA6+ years experiencetanjil@sharetasking.comsharetasking.com

Full-stack engineer specializing in developer tools, web performance, and browser-based utilities. Passionate about building fast, privacy-first tools that help developers and creators work more efficiently.