— Small Text Generator

Small Text Generator

Quick Tips

  • This tool runs entirely in your browser - your data stays private.
  • Press Ctrl+V (Cmd+V on Mac) to quickly paste text.
  • Use the Copy button to save your result to clipboard.
  • Bookmark this page for quick access!

Generate tiny text using Unicode superscript characters.

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Examples

Input
small text
Output
ˢᵐᵃˡˡ ᵗᵉˣᵗ
Input
tiny
Output
ᵗⁱⁿʸ
Input
HELLO
Output
ᴴᴱᴸᴸᴼ
Input
whisper
Output
ʷʰⁱˢᵖᵉʳ

Why Use This Tool?

What problems does this solve?

Superscript and subscript-style small text is useful for footnotes, mathematical notation, and creative effects, but these Unicode characters are hard to type.

Common use cases:

  • Creating small text effects for social media
  • Adding superscript style text without formatting support
  • Making compact text for space-limited contexts

Who benefits from this tool?

Social media users creating unique posts. Students needing superscript without word processors. Anyone wanting small text effects.

Privacy first: All processing happens in your browser. Your text never leaves your device.

Frequently Asked Questions

Unicode doesn't have perfect small versions of every letter. Some use superscript forms, others use small caps, and some letters don't have good small alternatives. This can cause slight size variations within the text.

Yes, small text works on Instagram, Twitter/X, Facebook, TikTok, and most platforms because it uses standard Unicode characters. The exact appearance may vary slightly depending on each platform's font choices.

Screen readers may pronounce small text differently or spell out "superscript" before letters. For accessibility, don't use small text for important information that users need to understand. Keep it decorative.

Yes, superscript numbers are perfect for exponents like x² or 10³. This is actually their intended Unicode purpose. The superscript numbers ⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹ are widely supported and display correctly in most contexts.

Small caps (ᴀʙᴄ) are uppercase letters at reduced size, all on the baseline. Superscript text (ᵃᵇᶜ) appears raised above the baseline. Both appear smaller than regular text but have different positions and use cases.

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