Software & Apps > Windows I Forgot My Windows 8 Password! What Are My Options? If you can't guess your password, reset your Microsoft account password, use a reset disk, have another user change the password, or reset your whole PC By Tim Fisher Tim Fisher Senior Vice President & Group General Manager, Tech & Sustainability Emporia State University Tim Fisher has more than 30 years' of professional technology experience. He's been writing about tech for more than two decades and serves as the SVP and General Manager of Lifewire. lifewire's editorial guidelines Updated on June 9, 2023 Reviewed by Chris Selph Reviewed by Chris Selph Chris Selph is a CompTIA-certified technology and vocational IT teacher. He also serves as network & server administrator and performs computer maintenance and repair for numerous clients. lifewire's editorial guidelines In This Article View All In This Article Review Your Options Make Educated Guesses Reset Your Password Online Use a Password Reset Disk Ask Another User to Change It Use a Password Reset Trick Reset Your PC Close What to Know The easiest solution to a forgotten Windows 8 password is to guess it! Below are some tips to help you remember.If you log in with your Microsoft account, it's easy to reset it through Microsoft's website.Other ideas: use a password reset disk, have another user change it for you, or use a Command Prompt trick. This article covers all the different ways you can reset your forgotten Windows 8 password. I Forgot My Windows 8 Password! What Are My Options? Lifewire / Nusha Ashjaee Fortunately, there are a number of ways to get back in if you forgot your Windows 8 password, all of which we detail below. Some of these ideas only apply if you log in to Windows using a local account (i.e., with a traditional username). Some work only if you're using a Microsoft account (you log in with an email address), and some work for both. We'll let you know each time. However, all of these ideas apply equally to any edition of Windows 8 or 8.1 you may be using, and most of them work exactly the same way for Windows 11/10. Make Educated Guesses at Your Password Before you roll your eyes at this one, give it a shot. Seriously, try this, if even just to humor us. Guessing is probably the first thing you did once you realized you forgot your password, but were they educated guesses or just a few frustrated tries? Yes, there are several geeky ways to get back into Windows, but before you spend all that time and energy with those, give a really good guess a shot. Considering that both simple and complex, well-crafted passwords are usually inspired by the things most familiar to us in our lives, think about whether your password could have something to do with: Your spouse's, partner's, friend's, or child's birthdayAn aspect of your first, middle, or last nameA favorite set of numbersA fond memory from childhoodA favorite food or activityThe phone number you remember when you were a kidWhere you work or liveYour pets...Or maybe it's some combination of the above Reset Your Microsoft Account Password Online An option you were given when you first bought your computer or installed Windows 8 was to sign up for, or log in with, a Microsoft account. One huge benefit of doing that is that it gives you an escape plan if you ever forget your password: You can reset your Microsoft account password. Go to Microsoft's Recover Your Account page and follow the on-screen prompts. You can reset a forgotten Windows 8 password online like this only if you're using a Microsoft account. With a local account, your password isn't stored with Microsoft online and so can't be reset by them. Use That Password Reset Disk You Made A password reset disk is exactly what it sounds like—it's a floppy disk, or flash drive, that can be used to reset your local Windows 8 account password if you forget it. If you have one, this is the time to find it and use it! Unfortunately, it's that if you have one bit that will probably have you moving on to the next idea. A password reset disk is tied to your specific Windows account, meaning that one has to be created from within Windows, back when you actually knew your password. If you don't already have a password reset disk, your chance to create one for this instance is over. Once you get back into Windows using one of the other ideas below, follow our How Do I Create a Windows Password Reset Disk? guide so you can avoid all this trouble next time you forget your password. Have Another User Change Your Windows Password If more than one person uses your computer, and at least one of those other people is configured as an administrator, that person can log on with their password and change your password for you from the User Accounts applet in Control Panel. If you've never done this, we have a how-to you can follow along with: How to Change Another User's Password in Windows. This works only for local accounts. The other administrator user can have a Microsoft account or a local account, but yours must be a local account to have your password changed this way. Use This Trick to Reset Your Windows Password There's a free and relatively simple procedure you can follow that lets you reset your password if you've forgotten it. With this trick, you'll be able to reset your Windows 8 password right from the Windows login screen, without a password reset disk or flash drive, and without any need for third-party software. You'll have to use Command Prompt and do some things you may have never done before, but follow our instructions closely, and you'll get through it fine. This process will only work if you log in to Windows with a local account. Several other sites recommend this process for Windows 8 in all cases, but it will not successfully reset your password if you're using a Microsoft account to log in. If, for whatever reason, the almost-always-work ideas above weren't successful for you, it's time to move on to a more "serious" method. Reset Your PC The Reset Your PC process is very different from just resetting your password. This process removes all your installed programs, apps, and even all of your saved data. In other words, you get to log in to Windows again because your computer is reset back to its initial configuration, just as it was when you bought it or first installed Windows. See our article on How to Reset Your PC in Windows for a full walkthrough of this process. You'll need to access Advanced Startup Options and then choose Troubleshoot > Reset Your PC. (The Refresh Your PC option won't help with password issues.) This is obviously not a great way to get past a forgotten password, but if all else fails, this will almost certainly work. You'll have the option of creating a new local account or Microsoft account. If you happen to have a second Microsoft account you do know the password to, you'll have the option of signing in with that. In very rare cases, where you've both forgotten your Windows 8 password, and Reset Your PC isn't functioning for some reason, you can choose to clean install Windows 8 as long as you have a Windows 8 setup disc or flash drive available. Performing a clean install accomplishes the same thing as a Reset Your PC. Was this page helpful? Thanks for letting us know! Get the Latest Tech News Delivered Every Day Subscribe Tell us why! Other Not enough details Hard to understand Submit