Free Tool

Small Text Generator

Convert text to small caps, superscript, and subscript Unicode styles instantly. Works in Instagram, Twitter, Discord, and anywhere plain text is accepted.

0 chars

Letters and digits convert to small Unicode styles. Spaces and punctuation pass through unchanged.

text_decrease

Start typing above

Your text will instantly appear in 3 small Unicode styles

ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ

Small Caps

ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ

Superscript

ₛᵤᵦₛ꜀ᵣᵢₚₜ

Subscript

About Small Text Generator

About This Small Text Generator

This tool converts your text into three small Unicode text styles — small caps, superscript, and subscript — that work in Instagram bios, Twitter/X, Discord, and anywhere else plain text is accepted. No fonts, no CSS, no HTML required. Just type, pick a style, and copy.

The Three Styles

  • Small Caps (ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ): Uppercase-shaped letters at a reduced size, created using dedicated Unicode small capital characters. Commonly used for stylised names, brand text, and social bios.
  • Superscript (ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ): Characters raised above the baseline, like footnote numbers or mathematical exponents. Full A–Z letter and 0–9 digit coverage in Unicode.
  • Subscript (ₛᵤᵦₛ꜀ᵣᵢₚₜ): Characters lowered below the baseline, as seen in chemical formulas like H₂O. Unicode defines subscript forms for a subset of letters plus all digits 0–9.

How It Works

Each style uses specific Unicode character ranges. Small caps map to Latin phonetic extension characters scattered across the Unicode Phonetic Extensions and IPA blocks. Superscript letters use the Modifier Letters block, and digits use the Superscripts and Subscripts block (U+2070–U+209F). All conversion runs in your browser with no server calls.

Where to Use Small Text

  • Instagram and TikTok bios and captions
  • Twitter/X display names and profile bios
  • Discord server names and display names
  • Facebook, LinkedIn, and Reddit posts
  • YouTube channel names and descriptions
  • Notion, Obsidian, and other plain-text editors
  • Email subject lines and signatures

Subscript Coverage Note

Unicode only defines subscript forms for these letters: a, e, h, k, l, m, n, o, p, s, t, x. All other letters are passed through unchanged. Digits 0–9 have full subscript coverage. If complete subscript letter coverage is important, superscript or small caps may be a better fit.

Got questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about our tools. Can't find what you're looking for? Contact us.

What is a small text generator?

A small text generator converts standard text into smaller-looking Unicode character variants — small caps, superscript, and subscript. Because these are real Unicode characters (not shrunken fonts or CSS tricks), they paste as plain text into Instagram bios, Twitter/X, Discord, and any other app that accepts Unicode.

What are small caps?

Small caps are uppercase-shaped letters rendered at a smaller size. This generator uses dedicated Unicode small capital characters (e.g. ᴀ, ʙ, ᴄ) to replicate the effect in plain text. They are commonly used for stylised names, titles, and bios.

What is superscript text?

Superscript characters sit above the baseline — like the exponent in x². This generator maps letters and digits to their Unicode superscript equivalents (e.g. ᵃ, ᵇ, ⁰, ¹). All 26 letters and all 10 digits have Unicode superscript forms.

What is subscript text?

Subscript characters sit below the baseline — like the 2 in H₂O. Unicode only defines subscript forms for a limited set of letters (a, e, h, k, l, m, n, o, p, s, t, x) and all 10 digits. Letters without a subscript equivalent are passed through unchanged.

Where can I use small text?

Anywhere plain Unicode text is accepted: Instagram bios and captions, Twitter/X display names and posts, Discord usernames and messages, Facebook and LinkedIn posts, YouTube descriptions, Reddit comments, WhatsApp, Telegram, email subjects, and Notion or other note-taking apps.

Why do some letters stay normal in subscript?

The Unicode Standard only includes subscript forms for a subset of letters — those needed for phonetic, mathematical, and chemical notation. Letters without an official subscript codepoint are left unchanged. Superscript and small caps have full A–Z coverage.

Is this tool free?

Yes — completely free, no sign-up required. All conversion happens in your browser; no text is sent to any server.