Hashcat Compressed Wordlist May 2026

zcat custom_8char.gz | hashcat -a 0 -m 1800 hash.txt gzip is old. zstd (Zstandard) offers better compression and faster decompression. Install zstd and use it with Hashcat.

You obtained realhuman_phillipines.7z (a 6 GB compressed list containing 200 million passwords). You have an NTLM hash to crack. hashcat compressed wordlist

Hashcat can read from stdin (Standard Input). This is the golden key. Unix systems have a beautiful symbiotic relationship with gzip and zcat (or gzcat on macOS). Since Hashcat reads line by line from stdin, you can decompress on the fly. zcat custom_8char

# The golden pattern for all compressed wordlists: [decompressor] [archive] -so | hashcat -a 0 -m [hash_type] [hashes.txt] Now go forth, compress intelligently, and crack efficiently. You obtained realhuman_phillipines

7z x -so realhuman_phillipines.7z | hashcat -m 1000 -a 0 ntlm_hash.txt -o cracked.txt --potfile-path my.pot Hashcat will show Speed.#1 in hashes per second. If you see the speed fluctuating wildly, the decompression is the bottleneck. Consider temporarily extracting to RAM.

If you interrupt Hashcat (Ctrl+C), piping loses your place. To solve this, use --stdout combined with tee and split :

zstd -dc wordlist.zst | hashcat -a 0 hash.txt Benchmarks show zstd decompresses 3-5x faster than gzip on multi-core CPUs, meaning less GPU idle time. Let’s walk through a realistic scenario.