What this tool does
Explains Microsoft Office document protection modes and helps identify which type is used (open password vs modify restriction).
This page focuses on practical, step‑by‑step usage for **Office Password Analyzer**, with clear examples and common pitfalls.
When you should use it
Use it when a document won’t open, or when auditing whether protection is strong encryption or just editing restriction.
How to use
- Paste metadata or tool output if supported.
- The tool identifies protection type and version hints.
- Follow authorized recovery steps.
Quick example
Example: Distinguish ‘restrict editing’ from true ‘encrypt with password’ protection.
Notes
Only attempt recovery for documents you own or are authorized to access.
Office Password Analyzer
Professional MS Office document password analysis and security testing
Upload Office File
Drop your Office file here or click to browse
Supports Word (.doc, .docx), Excel (.xls, .xlsx), PowerPoint (.ppt, .pptx) - max 500MB
Security First
We do NOT store your Office files. All processing happens in memory and files are deleted immediately.
Your files are processed securely on our server and never leave our system.
We do not collect, log, or monitor any personal information.
Legal Usage Only
Only use this tool on Office files you own or have explicit permission to access.
Unauthorized access to protected files is illegal and punishable by law.
Office Password Recovery Reference
FAQ
Is Office Password Analyzer encryption?
No. It is primarily an analysis/encoding utility. If you need confidentiality, use a real encryption scheme and manage keys properly.
What should I do if the input fails to decode/parse?
Start by checking for missing padding, wrong alphabet/variant, or extra whitespace. If the data looks multi-layered, try decoding step-by-step (e.g., URL decode → Base64 decode).
Is it safe to paste sensitive data here?
For best security, avoid pasting real secrets (private keys, live tokens, seed phrases). Use test data or work offline, especially for anything that could grant access or move funds.