PASSWIZARD.NET

Recommended password workflow

A practical end-to-end flow: set up a password manager once, generate secrets with Passwizard, store them safely, and stay ahead of leaks. This page is a map—not a substitute for your chosen password manager or its documentation.

One-time setup
Password manager
Master password
2FA on key accounts
Each new or rotated password
Generate on Passwizard
Save in password manager
Sign in on the site
Enable site 2FA
Revoke old sessions if needed
Ongoing hygiene
No reuse · rotate after leaks · breach checks · OS updates & screen lock

1 · One-time setup

Do this once before you rely on generated passwords everywhere.

  1. Choose a password managerPick a reputable manager (cloud or offline) that fits your threat model. You will store every site password here—not in spreadsheets, notes, or browser-only memory.
  2. Create a strong master passwordThis is the one passphrase you memorize. It unlocks everything else. Make it long and unique; it is not the same as passwords for individual websites.
  3. Enable 2FA where it mattersTurn on two-factor authentication for your email, your password-manager account, and other high-value logins. See the 2FA guide for how to pick a method.

2FA guide

2 · New account or new password

Every time you sign up or rotate a password, follow the same sequence:

The schematic summarizes each step in short labels. The bullet points in section 1 and 3 spell out the same ideas with full context.

  1. Generate a strong password on passwizard.net (match the site’s length and character rules).
  2. Immediately save a record in your password manager: site name, URL, username, and the generated password.
  3. Register or sign in on the target site using the password from your manager (autofill or paste).
  4. Enable 2FA on that site if offered—especially for email, banking, and identity providers.
  5. Use “sign out everywhere” or revoke sessions on that site if you rotated an existing password.

Password generator

3 · Ongoing hygiene

Security is a habit, not a one-off.

  • Do not reuse passwords across sites; let the manager create and fill unique secrets per account.
  • Change passwords when you suspect compromise or after a confirmed breach—not on an arbitrary schedule.
  • Occasionally check whether your credentials appear in known leaks (see our Password Leaks page).
  • Keep devices updated and lock your screen when you step away so your vault stays protected.

Password leak check

How Passwizard fits in

Passwizard generates cryptographically strong random passwords in your browser. It does not replace a password manager: use the generator for entropy, then the manager to store, sync, and autofill. For Wi‑Fi credentials you share in a physical space, use the WiFi QR tool—still unique secrets, managed wherever you control network access.

Related tools

Complete your security setup

Combine these free tools for end-to-end protection. Everything runs locally or with strict privacy guarantees.