Small Text Generator
Type or paste your text below to convert it into small caps, superscript, or subscript Unicode characters. Copy with one click.
Small Text Result
Small Caps
ᴛʏᴘᴇ ꜱᴏᴍᴇᴛʜɪɴɢ ᴀʙᴏᴠᴇ ᴛᴏ ꜱᴇᴇ ᴛʜᴇ ᴇꜰꜰᴇᴄᴛ
How to Use the Small Text Generator
Type Your Text
Enter or paste any text into the input box. The generator converts it instantly as you type.
Choose a Style
Select Small Caps for a compact look, Superscript for raised text, or Subscript for lowered text.
Copy & Paste
Click the Copy button and paste your small text into any app, bio, or website.
Where to Use Small Text
Instagram Bios
Make your Instagram bio unique with small caps or superscript text. Stand out from the crowd with a clean, stylized profile description.
Twitter Usernames
Add small text to your Twitter/X display name or bio for a distinctive aesthetic. Small caps give a professional, typographic feel.
Discord Profiles
Use superscript or subscript text in Discord usernames, server names, or channel descriptions for a creative touch that catches attention.
Minecraft Server Names
Create eye-catching Minecraft server names and MOTDs with small text characters. Works great for stylized server branding and descriptions.
Platform Compatibility
Small text uses Unicode characters and works on any platform that renders Unicode. Some older systems may not display all subscript letters.
Full support
Twitter / X
Full support
Full support
Discord
Full support
TikTok
Full support
Full support
YouTube
Full support
Full support
Telegram
Full support
Minecraft
Partial support
Slack
Full support
Full support
Frequently Asked Questions
What is small text?
Small text uses special Unicode characters that look like miniature versions of regular letters. There are three main styles: small caps (ᴛɪɴʏ), superscript (ᵗⁱⁿʸ), and subscript (ₜᵢₙʸ). These are actual Unicode characters, not formatting, so they work anywhere text is supported.
Why are some subscript letters missing?
Unicode does not include subscript versions of every letter. Letters like b, c, d, f, g, w, y, and z have no official subscript Unicode character, so they appear in their normal size. Superscript and small caps have nearly complete alphabets.
Where can I use small text?
Small text works on any platform that supports Unicode, including Instagram bios, Twitter/X usernames, Discord profiles, Facebook posts, TikTok bios, Reddit, YouTube comments, and more. It also works in emails and documents.
Is small text the same as changing font size?
No. Small text uses entirely different Unicode characters that naturally appear smaller. Unlike HTML or CSS font-size changes, these characters keep their appearance when copied and pasted anywhere, because they are distinct code points in the Unicode standard.
Can I use small text for math or science notation?
Yes. Superscript and subscript characters are commonly used for exponents (x²), chemical formulas (H₂O), and footnote references. The generator supports digits 0–9 in both superscript and subscript forms.