Free tool
Yes or No
Ask a question and get a clear yes or no at random. Add a maybe for a third option, see your recent answers, and copy the result. Runs in your browser — no account, nothing to install.
Related tools
Common questions
Is the yes-or-no generator free?
Is the answer random?
Can I add a Maybe option?
Does it need an account?
Can I use it to make decisions?
How is this different from a coin flip?
Free tool
About yes or no
This is a free yes-or-no generator. Press Ask and it answers your question at random — a clear Yes or No. Turn on Maybe to add a third option, watch your recent answers build up, and copy the result. The tool runs in your browser, with no account and nothing to install.
A random answer
Each answer is an even pick between the options. When your browser supports it, the result comes from the browser secure random source, so Yes and No are equally likely — neither one is favored. Where that is not available, the tool uses the standard pseudo-random generator.
Add a maybe
By default the answer is just Yes or No. Turn on Maybe and the tool picks between three equal outcomes instead, which is handy when a flat yes or no feels too strict. Turn it off again at any time to go back to two.
Use it to decide
A yes-or-no answer is the fastest way to settle a small question when you are stuck between doing something and not — should I go, should I send it, should I wait. It takes the back-and-forth out of a minor choice and gives you one clear answer to act on.
See your recent answers
Every ask is added to a short list of recent answers, so you can glance back at the last few without losing them. This is useful when you ask several quick questions in a row, or just want to see how the answers fell. The list clears when you close the tab.
Private by default
Your questions never leave your device — in fact, you never type them in; you keep the question in your head and only the answer appears on screen. Nothing is uploaded and nothing is saved, so it is private by design.
How it compares to a coin flip
A yes-or-no answer and a coin flip use the same fair randomness; the difference is only in the words. Use yes or no when your question already has a yes-or-no shape, and a coin flip when you would rather think in heads and tails or name the two sides yourself.
Reading the answer
Each answer appears as a large word with its own icon: a check for yes, a cross for no, and a wavy line for maybe. The color helps too — green, red, and brass. The Copy button puts the current answer on your clipboard, ready to paste into a message or a note.
Related tools
When you need a strong random password instead of a yes-or-no answer, use the password generator. For random names to fill a list or test a form, try the random name generator. And for placeholder text in a layout, use the lorem ipsum generator. You can see the full set on the tools page.
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