Small Text Generator: Superscript, Subscript & Small Caps

Small text is everywhere online β€” from ᡗⁱⁿʸ superscript comments on Reddit to sα΄α΄€ΚŸΚŸ α΄„α΄€α΄˜s Instagram bios. It's subtle, eye-catching, and surprisingly useful for making your text stand out without being loud.

There are three types of small text, and each uses different Unicode characters. Here's how they work and when to use each one.


Three Types of Small Text

1. Superscript (Λ’α΅˜α΅–α΅‰Κ³Λ’αΆœΚ³β±α΅–α΅—)

Text that appears raised and smaller, like mathematical exponents. Superscript is the most popular type of small text online because it's compact and readable.

Best for: Social media bios, comments, subtle annotations

Try it: Superscript Generator

2. Subscript (β‚›α΅€α΅¦β‚›κœ€α΅£α΅’β‚šβ‚œ)

Text that appears lowered and smaller, like chemical formulas (Hβ‚‚O). Subscript has more limited character coverage than superscript β€” some letters may not convert.

Best for: Scientific notation, chemical formulas, creative text effects

Try it: Subscript Generator

3. Small Caps (sα΄α΄€ΚŸΚŸ α΄„α΄€α΄˜s)

Uppercase letters at the size of lowercase. Small caps look clean, professional, and are fully readable β€” making them the most versatile small text style.

Best for: Instagram bios, display names, headers, professional profiles

Try it: Small Caps Generator


Where People Use Small Text

Social Media Bios

Small caps are hugely popular for Instagram and TikTok bios. They add visual distinction without being hard to read:

sᴏᴄΙͺα΄€ΚŸ ᴍᴇᴅΙͺα΄€ ᴍᴀɴᴀɒᴇʀ | ɴʏᴄ

Reddit Comments

Superscript is a Reddit tradition. People use it for whispered asides, footnotes, and humor:

I definitely did not eat the whole pizza Λ’α΅’α΅α΅‰α΅‡α΅’α΅ˆΚΈ Λ’α΅—α΅’α΅– ᡐᡉ

Gaming Usernames

Small text in usernames looks unique and is often allowed where special characters aren't.

Messaging Apps

Small text in WhatsApp and Telegram messages adds emphasis or creates a "whisper" effect.


Small Text Limitations

Not all characters have small Unicode equivalents:

  • Superscript covers all 26 letters and digits 0-9
  • Subscript is missing some letters (c, d, f, g, q, w, y, z may not convert perfectly)
  • Small caps covers all 26 letters but no digits

Numbers: superscript supports ⁰¹²³⁴⁡⁢⁷⁸⁹ while subscript supports β‚€β‚β‚‚β‚ƒβ‚„β‚…β‚†β‚‡β‚ˆβ‚‰.

Tip: If a character can't be converted, the generator will leave it as-is. This is normal.


Small Text vs. Actual Small Font Size

Important distinction: this generator creates Unicode small characters, not small font sizes. The characters themselves are small regardless of what font size the platform uses.

This means:

  • They work on platforms that don't let you control font size (Instagram, Twitter, Discord)
  • They stay small even when someone zooms in
  • They're actual characters, not formatting β€” so they copy and paste correctly

How to Generate Small Text

  1. Go to YayText
  2. Type your text in the input box
  3. Find Superscript, Subscript, or Small Caps in the results
  4. Click to copy, paste wherever you want

It's free, works in your browser, and takes about 5 seconds.


Frequently Asked Questions

Which small text style should I use? For most purposes, small caps is the best choice β€” it's fully readable and covers all letters. Use superscript for a tiny/whisper effect. Use subscript only for specific formatting needs.

Does small text work in email subject lines? Yes! Unicode small text renders in email subject lines across Gmail, Outlook, and Apple Mail. It's a creative way to make your emails stand out.

Can screen readers read small text? Some screen readers handle Unicode small characters well, but others may read them incorrectly. For accessibility-critical content, use regular text.

Generate your small text now at YayText β€” free and instant.