Make your text look different, without any formatting tools
Instagram doesn’t let you bold text in your bio. Twitter won’t let you use italics in a tweet. But Unicode doesn’t care about platform limitations. This tool converts your plain text into styled versions using Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols and other Unicode blocks, real characters that display as bold, italic, script, or circled text everywhere.
Type something in, and you instantly get it rendered in bold, italic, bold italic, script, double-struck, monospace, circled, squared, fullwidth, and inverted (upside-down). Copy whichever one you like and paste it wherever you want. That’s it.
The styles
- Bold, italic, bold italic, and script variants
- Double-struck (that “blackboard bold” math look)
- Monospace, circled, and squared styles
- Fullwidth and inverted (upside-down) text
- All styles generate at once as you type
- One-click copy next to each style
- Works on Instagram, Twitter/X, TikTok, Facebook, WhatsApp, LinkedIn, basically anywhere Unicode renders
- Your text never leaves the browser
Just type and copy
Enter your text in the input box. Every style variant appears below, updating live. Click the copy button next to whichever one catches your eye, then paste it into your bio, post, or message.
Typing “Hello” gives you 𝗛𝗲𝗹𝗹𝗼 (bold), 𝙷𝚎𝚕𝚕𝚘 (monospace), Ⓗⓔⓛⓛⓞ (circled), and several more. Honestly, scrolling through all the variations is kind of addictive.
Why people use this
Instagram and TikTok bios are the big one. Those platforms strip out formatting, but Unicode characters slip right through. Your bio stands out while everyone else’s looks the same.
Bold words in tweets: Twitter doesn’t support rich text, but 𝗯𝗼𝗹𝗱 Unicode characters show up just fine. Great for emphasizing a key point without shouting in ALL CAPS.
Display names on Discord, Telegram, and gaming platforms: a styled username gets noticed. Circled or double-struck text looks especially distinctive.
Marketing posts: styled text draws the eye when scrolling through a feed. Use it sparingly for maximum impact.
One caveat: some Unicode characters look slightly different depending on the device, OS, and font. The basic Latin range (A-Z) works reliably everywhere. More exotic characters might not render perfectly on older phones. Test on the platform you’re targeting before publishing anything important.
For ASCII-based visual text, check out the ASCII Art Generator. For standard text casing like Title Case or camelCase, the Case Converter has you covered.
FAQ
Do these actually work on social media?
Yes. They’re real Unicode characters, not formatting, so they display on any platform that supports Unicode. That includes Instagram, Twitter/X, Facebook, TikTok, LinkedIn, and WhatsApp.
Why does the text look weird on some devices?
Older devices and certain fonts don’t have full Unicode support. The mathematical symbol blocks that power these styles are well-supported on modern devices, but there are edge cases. Stick to bold and italic for maximum compatibility.
What’s inverted text?
It flips your characters upside down using special Unicode glyphs and reverses the string. Not every letter has a perfect upside-down equivalent, so some characters look approximate.
Will these work in email subject lines?
Hit or miss. Gmail and Apple Mail handle them well. Outlook sometimes shows empty squares. Don’t use them in critical business emails without testing first.
Does my text get stored?
No. Everything happens in your browser. Nothing is transmitted or saved.