MD5 Hash of "bar"
MD5 Hash
37b51d194a7513e45b56f6524f2d51f2 Hash Any Text
All Hashes of "bar"
| Algorithm | Hash |
|---|---|
| MD5 | 37b51d194a7513e45b56f6524f2d51f2 |
| SHA-1 | 62cdb7020ff920e5aa642c3d4066950dd1f01f4d |
| SHA-256 | fcde2b2edba56bf408601fb721fe9b5c338d10ee429ea04fae5511b68fbf8fb9 |
| SHA-512 | d82c4eb5261cb9c8aa9855edd67d1bd10482f41529858d925094d173fa662aa91ff39bc5b188615273484021dfb16fd8284cf684ccf0fc795be3aa2fc1e6c181 |
About MD5
MD5 produces a 128-bit digest, written as 32 hexadecimal characters. The same input always produces the same hash, while even a one-character change yields a completely different output. This page's hash is exactly 32 characters long, as expected for MD5.
Security: MD5 is cryptographically broken — practical collisions have been demonstrated since 2004. It is fine for non-security checksums and deduplication, but should never be used for passwords, signatures, or any security-sensitive purpose. It is most appropriate for file checksums and non-security deduplication.
Can this hash be reversed?
Hashing is one-way — you cannot mathematically reverse a MD5 hash to recover its input. However, precomputed (rainbow) tables can simply look up the hashes of common inputs, so a common dictionary word like "bar" should never be used as a password. Strong passwords are long, random, and salted before hashing.