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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T15:18:38+00:00 2026-05-16T15:18:38+00:00

Many of the encryption techniques I’ve seen can easily encrypt a simple 8 digit

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Many of the encryption techniques I’ve seen can easily encrypt a simple 8 digit number like “12345678” but the result is often something like “8745b34097af8bc9de087e98deb8707aac8797d097f” (made up but you get the idea).

Is there a way to encrypt this 8 digit number but have the resulting encrypted value be the same or at least only a slightly longer number? An ideal target would be to end up with a 10 digit number or less. Is this possible while still maintaining a fairly strong encryption?

Update: I didn’t make the output clear enough – I am wanting an 8-digit number to turn into an 8-digit number, not 8 bytes.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T15:18:38+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:18 pm

    A lot here is going to depend on how seriously you mean your “public-key-encryption” tag. Do you actually want public key encryption, or are you just taking that possibility into account?

    If you’re willing to use symmetric encryption, producing 8 bytes of output from 8 bytes of input is pretty easy: just run 3DES in ECB (Electronic Code Book) mode, and that’s what you’ll get. The main weakness of ECB is that a given input will always produce the same result, so if your inputs might repeat an attacker will be able to see that repetition, and may be able to notice a pattern of “encrypted value X leads to action Y”, even if they can’t/don’t break the encryption itself at all. If you can live with that, 3DES/ECB is probably your answer.

    If you can’t live with that, 3DES in CFB mode is probably the next best. This will produce 16 bytes of output from 8 bytes of input (note that it’s not normally doubling the input size, but adding 8 bytes to the input size).

    3DES is hardly what anybody would call a cutting edge algorithm, but I’d say it still qualifies as “fairly strong encryption”. Part of its weakness as an algorithm stems from its relatively small block size, but that also minimizes expansion of the output.

    Edit: Sorry, I forgot to the public-key possibility. With most public-key cryptography, the smallest result is roughly equal to the key size. With RSA encryption, that’ll typically mean a minimum of something like 1024 bits (and often considerably more than that). To keep the result smaller, I’d probably use Elliptical Curve Cryptography, for which a ~200 bit key is reasonably secure against known attacks. This will still be larger than 3DES/CFB, but not outrageously so.

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