Random Group Generator

Free instant tool

Random Group Generator

Paste names and create random groups for class activities, games, projects, study teams, or workshops.

Use your own list

Leave it empty to use the saved list for this tool.

Result
Click to start
Show saved items
  • Ava
  • Liam
  • Emma
  • Noah
  • Olivia
  • Ethan
  • Sophia
  • Mason
  • Mia
  • Lucas
  • Isabella
  • Logan
  • Amelia
  • James
  • Harper
  • Benjamin
  • Evelyn
  • Elijah
  • Abigail
  • William
  • Emily
  • Henry
  • Ella
  • Alexander
  • Scarlett
  • Michael
  • Grace
  • Daniel
  • Chloe
  • Jacob

Create random groups without arguments

A random group generator turns a list of names into fair groups for class projects, review games, workshops, camps, clubs, or team activities. Instead of counting off, negotiating, or letting the same people partner every time, you can paste the names and generate groups quickly.

Useful for classrooms, teams, and events

Teachers can use random groups for discussion circles, lab partners, reading groups, math stations, debate teams, and project work. Coaches and youth leaders can divide players for drills or activities. Workplace facilitators can create breakout teams for training sessions or icebreakers.

The most common need is simple: “I have these people, and I need groups of two, three, four, or five.” A good group generator should make that easy on mobile, because many users are standing in front of a room when they need it.

Choose the group style that fits

Use pairs for quick partner talk, peer review, tutoring, and warm-ups. Use groups of three or four for short problem-solving tasks where everyone can speak. Use larger groups for games, stations, or brainstorming sessions.

If the number of people does not divide evenly, one group may have an extra member. That is usually better than delaying the activity. For higher-stakes projects, you can reroll once or manually adjust after the random groups appear.

Keep random grouping fair and practical

Random does not always mean perfect. It can produce groups that are uneven by skill, behavior, language level, or role. For casual activities, that is fine. For graded projects or sensitive classroom dynamics, use the random result as a starting point and make teacher-approved adjustments.

A helpful routine is to tell the group that random teams are used to save time and mix people up, not to rank anyone. This reduces complaints and helps participants accept the result.

Mobile-friendly grouping tips

Paste one name per line. Remove absent students before generating. Use first names or initials if the screen is visible to others. If you run repeated activities, keep a clean roster in your notes app so you can copy it quickly.

For online meetings, paste participant names from the chat or attendance list. For in-person games, include only the people who are ready to play so teams stay balanced.

When to reroll groups

Reroll if someone is missing, a duplicate name appears, or the group sizes do not match the activity. Avoid rerolling repeatedly just because someone dislikes the result, or random grouping loses its fairness. One reroll rule keeps the process fast and trusted.

FAQ

Can I make pairs?

Yes. Set the group size to two or split the list into pairs.

What if the list does not divide evenly?

One or more groups may have an extra person.

Can I use it for online breakout rooms?

Yes. Paste attendee names and copy the generated groups.

Should I adjust random groups?

For casual activities, usually no. For important projects, adjust when needed.

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