Hash (MD5 → SHA-512)
Compute MD5, SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 in one shot.
Also known as: MD5 / SHA-256 generator.
100% offline · macOS, Windows & Linux · free for personal use

// overview
What it does
Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) is one of 55 tools in Hexkit, a desktop developer toolbox that runs entirely on your own machine. Compute MD5, SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 in one shot.
Because Hexkit is a native app rather than a web page, anything you paste into the hash (md5 → sha-512) stays local — there are no uploads, no accounts and no telemetry. You can generate IDs, hashes and test data even with the network turned off, which makes it safe for tokens, keys and production data.
// steps
How to use Hash (MD5 → SHA-512)
- 1
Open Hexkit and select "Hash (MD5 → SHA-512)", or press the command-palette key and start typing its name.
- 2
Pick your options. Compute MD5, SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 in one shot.
- 3
Read or copy the result. Everything is computed locally by Hexkit's Rust core, so nothing is ever uploaded.
Tip: the command palette opens any tool in one keystroke.
// faq
Frequently asked questions
- Is Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) free?
- Yes. Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) is part of Hexkit, which is free for personal and non-commercial use on macOS, Windows and Linux.
- Does Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) work offline?
- Completely. Hexkit runs every tool locally with no network access, so Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) works on a plane or an air-gapped machine.
- Is my data uploaded anywhere?
- No. Hexkit makes no network calls and has no telemetry — whatever you paste stays on your computer.
- Which hash algorithms can it compute?
- MD5, SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 — all computed in one shot from the same input. For keyed hashes, use the HMAC tool.
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Related tools
Use Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) without sending your data anywhere.
Hash (MD5 → SHA-512) ships inside Hexkit — a free, offline developer toolbox for macOS, Windows and Linux. No account, no uploads.