Strong passwords are important protections to help you have safer online transactions.
An ideal password is long and has letters, punctuation, symbols, and numbers.
Whenever possible, use at least 14 characters or more.
How to Create Strong Password
The greater the variety of characters in your password, the better.
Use the entire keyboard, not just the letters and characters you use or see most often.
There are many ways to create a long, complex password. Here is one way that may make remembering it easier:
What to do Suggestion Example
Start with a sentence or two (about 10 words total). Think of something meaningful to you. Long and complex passwords are safest. I keep mine secret. (10 words)
Turn your sentences into a row of letters. Use the first letter of each word. lacpasikms (10 characters)
Add complexity. Make only the letters in the first half of the alphabet uppercase. lACpAsIKMs (10 characters)
Add length with numbers. Put two numbers that are meaningful to you between the two sentences. lACpAs56IKMs (12 characters)
Add length with punctuation. Put a punctuation mark at the beginning. ?lACpAs56IKMs (13 characters)
Add length with symbols. Put a symbol at the end. ?lACpAs56IKMs” (14 characters)
A password checker evaluates your password’s strength automatically. Try our secure password checker.
The easiest way to “remember” passwords is to write them down.
It is okay to write passwords down, but keep them secure. See 5 tips to keep your passwords secret.
Cyber criminals use sophisticated tools that can rapidly decipher passwords.
Dictionary words in any language.
Words in all languages are vulnerable.
Words spelled backwards, common misspellings, and abbreviations.
Words in all languages are vulnerable.
Sequences or repeated characters.
Examples: 12345678, 222222, abcdefg, or adjacent letters on your keyboard (qwerty).
Personal information.
Your name, birthday, driver’s license, passport number, or similar information.
