A tiny text generator converts regular letters into small Unicode characters — superscript, subscript, and small caps — that you can copy and paste into social media bios, captions, comments, or messages. Unlike HTML tags, these are actual Unicode characters that work as plain text anywhere Unicode is supported.
Superscript
ᵃᵇᶜ — raised above the baseline
ᵀʸᵖᵉ ˢᵒᵐᵉᵗʰⁱⁿᵍ ᵃᵇᵒᵛᵉ…
Subscript
ₐᵦ꜀ — lowered below the baseline
ₜᵧₚₑ ₛₒₘₑₜₕᵢₙg ₐᵦₒᵥₑ…
Small Caps
ᴀʙᴄ — miniature capital letters
ᴛʏᴘᴇ sᴏᴍᴇᴛʜɪɴɢ ᴀʙᴏᴠᴇ…
How to Use the Tiny Text Generator
The tiny text generator converts your ordinary letters and digits into small Unicode characters you can copy and paste anywhere. Unlike CSS tricks or HTML tags, these are actual Unicode code points — every social network, messaging app, or document editor that supports Unicode will display them correctly without any special formatting.
Step 1: Type or Paste Your Text
Click the input area at the top of the tool and type or paste whatever text you want to convert. The tool converts in real time — you will see all three output styles update as you type each character. There is no button to press; conversion is instant and continuous.
Step 2: Choose a Style
Three output styles are available. Superscript raises characters above the text baseline, producing text like ᵗʰⁱˢ — commonly used for footnote markers, mathematical exponents, and decorative captions. Subscript lowers characters below the baseline, producing text like ₜₕᵢₛ — familiar from chemical formulas such as H₂O. Small Caps renders lowercase letters as miniature uppercase letters like ᴛʜɪs — ideal for stylized headings, brand names, or emphasis without full uppercase.
Step 3: Check the Coverage Indicator
Below each output is a thin progress bar showing character coverage — the percentage of your input characters that have a dedicated Unicode equivalent for that style. The Unicode standard defines superscript and subscript forms for most Latin letters and all ten digits, but coverage is not 100%. Characters without an equivalent are passed through unchanged so your output remains readable. If you see a character in the output that looks the same as the input, it means that character does not have a small Unicode variant.
Step 4: Copy and Paste
Click the Copy button on any output card to copy that style's text to your clipboard. Paste it directly into Twitter, Instagram, Discord, Reddit, WhatsApp, YouTube comments, email subjects, or any other text field. Because the characters are plain Unicode, they will appear in the same small style wherever you paste them — no formatting code travels with them.
Common Uses for Tiny Text
Social media users use tiny text to add visual interest to bios, usernames, and captions. Writers use superscript for footnote markers and mathematical notation. Scientists and chemists use subscript characters in formulas when rich text is not available. Designers and brand teams use small caps for a typographic hierarchy effect in plain-text environments. Content creators use all three styles to make their posts stand out in feeds without images.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this tiny text generator free to use?
Yes, the Tiny Text Generator is completely free with no usage limits. You can convert as much text as you want with no signup, no account creation, and no premium tier. Everything runs locally in your browser.
Is my text data safe and private?
Yes, all text conversion happens entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. Your text is never sent to any server, never stored in a database, and never shared with anyone. Once you close the tab, nothing is retained.
Where can I use tiny text generated by this tool?
Tiny Unicode text works in most modern platforms that support Unicode, including Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Discord, Reddit, WhatsApp, YouTube comments, and most word processors. Some platforms or input fields may strip or not render Unicode characters correctly.
What is the difference between superscript and subscript text?
Superscript characters appear raised above the normal text baseline, like the exponents in mathematical notation (e.g., x²). Subscript characters appear below the baseline, as seen in chemical formulas (e.g., H₂O). Both use dedicated Unicode code points rather than HTML tags, so they copy and paste as plain text.
What are small caps and how are they different from uppercase?
Small caps are capital letters rendered at the same height as lowercase letters — they look like miniature uppercase letters. They use separate Unicode code points (not CSS font-variant), so the text pastes as small cap characters anywhere that supports Unicode. They are often used for headings, acronyms, or stylistic emphasis.
Why do some characters show a question mark or the original letter?
The Unicode standard only defines superscript, subscript, or small caps equivalents for a subset of Latin letters and digits. Characters that lack a dedicated Unicode equivalent — such as certain punctuation or accented letters — are shown with a fallback indicator. The tool displays these transparently so you always know which characters converted fully.
Can I mix tiny text with normal text?
Yes. Because the output is standard Unicode, you can copy individual style outputs and mix them freely with regular text in any document, social media post, or messaging app. The characters behave exactly like normal letters when selected, copied, or typed around.
Does tiny text affect character count on social media?
Yes. Each tiny Unicode character counts as one character just like a normal letter. A superscript 'a' (ᵃ) still counts as one character toward Twitter's 280-character limit, for example. The character count displayed in this tool reflects the raw character count of the output.