Small text uses special Unicode characters that look like tiny versions of normal letters. Type or paste your text, pick a style, and copy it. Works for bios, captions, comments, and anywhere you want your text to stand out without using images or custom fonts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Unicode is an international standard that assigns a unique code to every character, symbol, and emoji across every language. Within that standard there are characters that visually resemble small or raised versions of regular letters. This tool maps your normal text to those characters so the result can be copied and pasted anywhere as plain text.

Yes, on most of them. Instagram bios, TikTok bios and captions, Discord usernames and messages, Twitter bios, Reddit posts, and WhatsApp all support Unicode small text. It shows up as tiny text on any device that supports Unicode, which is essentially all modern smartphones and computers.

Some apps strip out unusual Unicode characters or replace them with a placeholder box. PDF editors, older word processors, and some email clients are the most common offenders. If the tiny text shows as squares or question marks, the app does not support those Unicode code points.

Gmail and most modern email clients will display it fine. Older or plain-text email systems may not render it correctly. Worth testing before you send anything important.

The tool itself has no limit. The platform you paste into may have its own character limit, so keep that in mind. The Unicode versions of letters count as one character each, just like regular letters.

Small caps replaces lowercase letters with uppercase-shaped but smaller characters. Superscript raises the text above the baseline. Subscript lowers it below. Each style uses a different set of Unicode characters, which is why they look visually distinct even though they are all plain text.