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How MAC Addresses Are Generated
A MAC (Media Access Control) address is a 48-bit hardware identifier typically displayed as six groups of two hexadecimal digits separated by colons: XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX. The generator creates fully random addresses using hexadecimal digits A–F and 0–9.
Generated MAC addresses are not registered with any IEEE Organisation Unique Identifier (OUI) and do not correspond to real network devices.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The addresses are randomly generated and not registered with any real hardware manufacturer. They are safe for test environments.
XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX where each X is a hexadecimal character (0-9, A-F). Example: 2A:B1:3C:D4:5E:F6.
The first 3 octets (OUI) are randomly generated and not necessarily linked to a real manufacturer. Use a dedicated OUI database if you need manufacturer-specific addresses.
Yes. Generate up to 1,000 MAC addresses and export to CSV or JSON.
Yes. The Dataset Generator includes a MAC address field automatically.
Related Tools
All generated data is entirely fictional and not suitable for use as real personal information.