Free code tools tool

Atbash Translator (A=Z Cipher)

Mirror alphabet letters with the Atbash cipher where A becomes Z and B becomes Y.

The interactive Atbash Translator loads instantly in modern browsers. If it does not load, refresh this page.

Tip: results are created in your browser. Nothing you type here is sent to a server.

How to convert with atbash translator

Atbash Translator is a format converter. For decoding, the input must match the expected pattern, such as spaced binary bytes, valid Base64, URL-encoded text, ASCII numbers, or hex pairs.

  1. Type plain text to encode it, or paste a valid encoded value to decode it when supported.
  2. Keep separators such as spaces between bytes, numbers, or hex pairs.
  3. Copy the converted output and verify it before using it in a puzzle, lesson, or developer workflow.

Start with "Atbash" so you can see the exact conversion format before pasting your own code-like text.

Atbash Translator examples

Try Atbash, Profile bio, Copy paste text first so you can see how this code tools tool behaves. Use the related tools beside the page when you need a different format, effect, or copy-paste style.

Encoding and decoding details

Atbash Translator is a utility converter for code-like text. Use it for conversion, decoding, puzzles, learning, quick checks, and developer cleanup tasks.

  • Use correctly formatted input for decoding.
  • Keep spaces between binary, ASCII, or hex values where needed.
  • Do not treat simple ciphers or encoders as secure encryption.

Converter notes

Code tools are deterministic: the same input should produce the same output. If decoding looks wrong, check separators, unsupported characters, or whether the input is actually encoded.

Frequently asked questions

Can atbash code translator encode and decode?

Where possible, the tool detects encoded input and converts it back. Some ciphers use a fixed direction or fixed shift.

Is atbash code translator secure encryption?

No. These are learning, formatting, puzzle, and utility converters. Do not use them to protect private data.

Why does atbash code translator decoding fail?

Encoded text must follow the expected format, such as spaced binary bytes, valid Base64, URL-encoded text, or matching ASCII/hex values.

Does atbash translator save my text?

No. Atbash Translator runs in your browser and does not need an account.