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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T21:37:30+00:00 2026-05-20T21:37:30+00:00

I’ve tried different sites/products and this seems to be split fairly evenly. Windows 7

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I’ve tried different sites/products and this seems to be split fairly evenly. Windows 7 and Gmail allow you to insert spaces in your password. Hotmail and Twitter do not.

While allowing spaces in a password increases the complexity of a password, it seems like many sites/programs do not allow them. Is there a good reason to allow/disallow spaces?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T21:37:30+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 9:37 pm

    This SuperUser question might be relevant.

    I think that your observation is accurate: many web-based systems accept only alphanumerics and a subset of symbolic characters (say, 0-9A-Za-z/_-!), but I think that this is simply historical convention. It may also be that programmers are used to the <space> character delimiting fields, rather than being found inside them.

    There’s also the issue of visibility: if you allow multiple consecutive spaces in a password, can the user easily count them? Might a system even collapse them into one (as unaided HTML would)? Can even a single space character be easily and quickly identified?

    However, plenty of other types of systems do allow spaces in passwords. I’d probably still stray from them simply to help prevent user confusion (if people are indeed used to spaces in passwords being invalid, a password with a space in may be confusing to many), but there doesn’t seem to be any technical reason not to allow them.

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