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Tiny Text Generator

Turn plain text into miniature raised or lowered Unicode letters you can copy.

Every style updates live as you type. Nothing leaves your browser.

Tiny styles
  • Tiny (raised)
    Small superscript letters
    ᵗⁱⁿʸ ᵗᵉˣᵗ
  • Tiny (lowered)
    Small subscript letters
    ₜᵢₙy ₜₑₓₜ

Previews use sample text until you type something.

How to make tiny text

  1. Type your text

    Enter a word or phrase in the box. Both tiny styles preview with sample text until you type your own.

  2. Compare raised and lowered

    A raised superscript style and a lowered subscript style both render your input, so you can pick the miniature look you want.

  3. Copy your style

    Press copy on the style you like and the small text lands on your clipboard with a confirmation.

  4. Paste it anywhere

    Drop it into a bio, caption, or username. It is plain Unicode, so the tiny look follows the text.

Why use this tool

Two tiny styles

A raised style using small superscript letters and a lowered style using subscript letters, both generated from one text box.

Characters, not a font

Each letter maps onto a real small Unicode character, so the miniature styling travels with the text instead of relying on a font.

Sensible fallbacks

The small alphabets are incomplete, so letters without a tiny form fall back to the closest available character and your text stays readable.

Live preview

Both styles update on every keystroke, and a sample phrase fills the previews until you type, so you compare before copying.

Runs entirely in your browser

The conversion is a lookup on the page. Your text is never uploaded, and there is no account to create.

About this tool

A tiny text generator swaps the letters you type for small Unicode characters, so your words render at a fraction of the usual size. It offers two variations: a raised style built from superscript letters that float near the top of the line, and a lowered style built from subscript letters that sit near the bottom. The output is text rather than an image or a font, which is what lets it keep its miniature look when you copy it into a bio, a caption, a username, or a chat window.

Most social platforms and messaging apps strip real formatting but preserve Unicode characters, so tiny styled text stays small wherever you paste it. Unicode does not include a complete set of small letters, so a few characters have no exact miniature form. When that happens the tool falls back to the closest small character or the original letter, so the result always renders and stays legible rather than showing empty boxes.

Tiny text is a subtle way to add flair to a username or caption, or to squeeze a note into a small space. Use it sparingly for important content, since some screen readers may announce the substituted characters awkwardly. For related looks, try the small caps generator, raise characters on their own with the superscript generator, or explore more alphabets in the fancy text generator.

Frequently asked questions

How does the tiny text generator work?
It maps the letters and digits you type onto small Unicode characters, either raised superscript or lowered subscript forms. These are real code points, not an image or a font, so the tiny text can be copied and pasted almost anywhere.
Why do some letters look different sizes?
Unicode does not provide a complete set of small letters, so a few characters have no exact tiny form. Those fall back to the closest available character, which can look slightly different from the rest.
Where can I use tiny text?
Anywhere that accepts Unicode text, including Instagram, TikTok, and X bios and captions, Discord, and chat. Because it is plain Unicode, it carries its small look with it.
Will tiny text be readable by screen readers?
Be mindful when using it for important content. Styled Unicode letters are different code points from normal letters, so some screen readers may not read them as ordinary text. They suit decorative use like bios and captions.
Is my text uploaded anywhere?
No. Everything runs in your browser. Your text is processed on your device and never sent to a server, stored, or logged.

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