Postman Dynamic Variables
Dynamic variables are built-in Postman shortcuts that generate random, realistic data automatically. You use them directly in URLs, headers, or body fields without writing any JavaScript. Every time you send a request, dynamic variables produce fresh values.
What Makes Them Dynamic
A regular variable stores a fixed value you set manually. A dynamic variable generates a new value on every request. They use the same double-curly-brace syntax but start with a dollar sign:
Regular variable: {{baseUrl}} → always resolves to the same URL
Dynamic variable: {{$randomInt}} → generates a different number each timeWhere to Use Dynamic Variables
Dynamic variables work anywhere you can use regular variables:
- In the URL bar
- In the request body
- In headers
- In query parameters
Most Useful Dynamic Variables
Random Numbers and IDs
| Variable | What It Generates | Example Output |
|---|---|---|
| {{$randomInt}} | Random integer between 0 and 1000 | 742 |
| {{$guid}} | Globally unique identifier (UUID v4) | b4f3a1d2-9e8c-4f7b-a0d1-2c3e4f5a6b7d |
| {{$timestamp}} | Current Unix timestamp (seconds) | 1718000000 |
| {{$isoTimestamp}} | Current date and time in ISO 8601 format | 2024-06-10T08:30:00.000Z |
Names and Personal Data
| Variable | Example Output |
|---|---|
| {{$randomFirstName}} | Marcus |
| {{$randomLastName}} | Thornton |
| {{$randomFullName}} | Sarah Nguyen |
| {{$randomEmail}} | olivia.santos@example.net |
| {{$randomUserName}} | brave_eagle42 |
| {{$randomPhoneNumber}} | +1-555-297-4831 |
Addresses and Locations
| Variable | Example Output |
|---|---|
| {{$randomCity}} | Portland |
| {{$randomCountry}} | Brazil |
| {{$randomStreetAddress}} | 14 Oak Lane |
| {{$randomZipCode}} | 49302 |
| {{$randomLatitude}} | 37.7749 |
| {{$randomLongitude}} | -122.4194 |
Commerce and Products
| Variable | Example Output |
|---|---|
| {{$randomProductName}} | Ergonomic Granite Shoes |
| {{$randomPrice}} | 87.50 |
| {{$randomColor}} | maroon |
| {{$randomDepartment}} | Clothing |
Internet and Technical
| Variable | Example Output |
|---|---|
| {{$randomUrl}} | https://sparse-division.net |
| {{$randomDomainName}} | quiet-harbor.com |
| {{$randomIP}} | 192.168.43.7 |
| {{$randomMACAddress}} | 3A:B2:C9:D4:E1:F0 |
| {{$randomPassword}} | 9X!mKw2@qZ |
Other Useful Variables
| Variable | Example Output |
|---|---|
| {{$randomBoolean}} | true |
| {{$randomWord}} | salmon |
| {{$randomJobTitle}} | Senior Data Analyst |
| {{$randomCompanyName}} | Horizon Systems Ltd. |
| {{$randomAbbreviation}} | PNG |
Real Example – Creating a Test User
Instead of hardcoding test data that becomes stale or causes duplicates, use dynamic variables in your POST body:
{
"name": "{{$randomFullName}}",
"email": "{{$randomEmail}}",
"phone": "{{$randomPhoneNumber}}",
"address": {
"street": "{{$randomStreetAddress}}",
"city": "{{$randomCity}}",
"country": "{{$randomCountry}}"
},
"password": "{{$randomPassword}}"
}Every time you send this request, Postman fills in completely different values. Run this 100 times in the Collection Runner and you generate 100 realistic, unique test users automatically.
Dynamic Variables in URLs
GET https://api.example.com/products?category={{$randomWord}}&page={{$randomInt}}This tests your API's query parameter handling with a different random word and page number on each request.
Combine Dynamic Variables with Scripts
You can capture the generated values from a body in a pre-request script if you need to reuse the same value in multiple places:
// Generate once, reuse everywhere
const generatedEmail = pm.variables.replaceIn("{{$randomEmail}}");
pm.environment.set("newUserEmail", generatedEmail);
Now {{newUserEmail}} holds the same email value across multiple requests in your collection.
How to See All Available Dynamic Variables
Type {{$ in any Postman input field (URL, body, header). Postman displays an autocomplete dropdown listing all available dynamic variables with a short description of each.
Summary
Dynamic variables generate fresh random data on every request without any JavaScript. They use {{$variableName}} syntax and work in URLs, headers, and body fields. Categories cover IDs, names, addresses, commerce, and technical data. Use them in test data creation to generate realistic, unique values automatically every time you run a request.
