Shuffle a list online

Add names, tasks, or options and get a random order. Good for presentations, queues, draws, and task lists without manual picking.

Quick answer

Random order for your own items

Add a list, spin the picker, and build the order one item at a time. With selected items excluded, the same option will not repeat until you reset.

Shuffle the list

Sequential Selection

1
2
Duration:

Enter options to spin

Helpful Guide

When random order helps

This mode is about sequencing your own items, not numeric ranges. It keeps order decisions quick and neutral.

Use cases

Presentation order

Add speakers or talks and create the order without manual drawing.

Task list

Shuffle tasks when any next step is acceptable.

Draws

Use teams, groups, or roles when the order should be random.

Participant queue

Build a queue for review, games, consultations, or discussions.

Option shuffling

Mix ideas, questions, topics, or practice cards.

Before and after examples

PresentationsBefore: Anna, Boris, Irene, Max. After: Irene, Max, Anna, Boris.
Daily tasksBefore: email, report, call, review. After: call, review, email, report.
Participant queueBefore: group 1, group 2, group 3. After: group 2, group 1, group 3.
Talk topicsBefore: SEO, QR, passwords, VAT. After: VAT, SEO, passwords, QR.
Test variantsBefore: A, B, C, D. After: C, A, D, B.

Need to shuffle a list?

Add at least two items, keep selected items excluded, and start building the random order.

Open list shuffler

Random sequence FAQ

How do I shuffle a list online?

Enter your list items, keep selected items excluded, and spin until you have the order you need.

Can the order avoid repeats?

Yes. Exclude selected items removes each chosen item until you reset the list.

How is this different from random numbers?

This mode works with text items like names, tasks, topics, teams, or options. No numeric range is required.

Can I use it for presentation order?

Yes. Add speakers or topics, spin, and keep the history as the selected order.

Can it help with task lists?

Yes. It is useful when several tasks are similar in priority and you just need a neutral starting point.