Small Text Generator

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Tiny Text Case

Transform normal text into small caps, superscript, or subscript using Unicode characters. Type or paste your text on the left, and the tiny versions appear on the right in real time. The output is plain text made from Unicode alphabets - not an actual smaller font - so you can copy and paste it into Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Discord, emails, or any platform that supports Unicode.

Why is the Text Small?

The tiny text generator transforms your normal text into Unicode subscript characters and small caps. It looks small because it uses a separate Unicode alphabet, not an actual smaller font size. This means you can copy and paste it into social media posts, bios, messages, Excel, Word, and other documents where you cannot control font size directly.

What are small caps?

Small caps are uppercase letters set at the same height and weight as surrounding lowercase letters. They're smaller than standard uppercase letters, creating a stylistic effect.

ᴛʜɪꜱ ɪꜱ ᴀɴ ᴇxᴀᴍᴘʟᴇ ᴏꜰ ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ

What is superscript?

Superscript refers to text that is smaller than the normal text and is set slightly above the line of type. It's often used for footnotes, mathematical exponents, and ordinal indicators.

ᵗʰᶦˢ ᶦˢ ᵃⁿ ᵉˣᵃᵐᵖˡᵉ ᵒᶠ ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳᶦᵖᵗ

What is subscript?

Subscript is similar to superscript but placed below the baseline of the text. It's used in chemical formulas, mathematical expressions, and footnotes.

ₜₕᵢₛ ᵢₛ ₐₙ ₑₓₐₘₚₗₑ ₒᶠ ₛᵤᵦₛᶜᵣᵢₚₜ

Why do some letters look different or missing in the tiny text?

Unicode does not include superscript or subscript versions of every letter. For example, the subscript alphabet is missing several characters (like "b", "c", "q", "w", "y", "z"), so the tool substitutes the closest available Unicode character. The result may not look perfectly uniform for all letters. Small caps have the best coverage since most letters have a corresponding Unicode small capital form.

Will tiny text display the same on all devices?

It depends on the device's font support. Most modern phones, tablets, and computers render Unicode superscript and small caps characters correctly. However, older devices or systems with limited font libraries may show blank squares or fallback characters for some letters. The small caps style tends to have the most consistent rendering across devices, while subscript has the most variation.

Where is tiny text commonly used?

Tiny text appears in a variety of contexts. Social media users add it to Instagram bios, Twitter/X profiles, and Facebook posts to create visual interest or fit more text into limited spaces. In academic and scientific writing, superscript is standard for footnote markers, mathematical exponents (like x²), and ordinal indicators (1st, 2nd, 3rd). Subscript is used in chemical formulas (H₂O, CO₂) and mathematical notation. Small caps are a traditional typographic style for headings, acronyms, and legal documents where a subtler emphasis than full capitals is desired.

Are Unicode tiny text characters accessible to screen readers?

Not reliably. Screen readers may read Unicode superscript and subscript characters by their formal Unicode names (e.g., "modifier letter small h") rather than as normal letters, making the text confusing for visually impaired users. Small caps tend to fare slightly better since many map to Latin letter code points, but results vary across screen readers and operating systems. For accessible content, use your platform's built-in superscript and subscript formatting (HTML <sup> and <sub> tags, or rich text options) instead of Unicode characters.