Type something and get three Unicode "tiny text" variants instantly — superscript, small caps, and subscript — all real characters that copy and paste into Instagram bios, Twitter replies, WhatsApp statuses, Discord servers, and anywhere else that accepts text. No images, no fonts to install.
Spur is the messaging side: comment-to-DM automation, story-reaction replies, and an AI agent that handles "what's the price?" DMs automatically. Same audience, bigger problem.
Add a touch of style to Instagram, Twitter/X and TikTok bios without breaking platform rules.
Use small caps or superscript to make your username and display name unmistakable.
Subtle visual hierarchy in WhatsApp status, Discord messages and product descriptions.
Tiny text isn't a font. Fonts are graphic data that has to be installed on the rendering device — if tiny text were a font, it'd render as a normal-size character on most devices. What tiny text actually is: a different set of Unicode characters that happen to look smaller than the standard alphabet.
Unicode is the universal encoding standard used by every modern device. It contains over 150,000 characters, including the oddities this tool uses:
Because they're all Unicode, they survive copy-paste across every platform that supports text.
| Platform | Works? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Instagram bio | Yes | The most popular use case — bio, captions, comments, DMs, Stories. |
| Twitter / X | Yes | All variants render. Not indexed by Twitter search. |
| Yes | Renders in chats, groups, and statuses. | |
| Yes | Works in posts, comments, and the About section. | |
| TikTok | Yes | Renders consistently in bios and captions. |
| Discord | Yes | The standard hack for small text, since Discord has no native option. |
| Mostly | Renders, but blocks LinkedIn search indexing — see our LinkedIn text formatter. | |
| YouTube | Mostly | Renders, but YouTube SEO can't index keywords in tiny text. |
| Web page headlines | Don't | Search engines treat the characters as different strings — de-indexes your keywords. |
| App store listings | Don't | Apple and Google reject non-standard Unicode in titles. |
Short version: use tiny text on social surfaces where vibe matters more than searchability. Avoid it anywhere a search engine indexes your words or a screen reader needs to read them.
This tool generates small caps, superscript, and subscript. Pick whichever fits the vibe.
SEO: Yes, on a webpage. Search engines treat ᵗⁱⁿʸ and "tiny" as completely different strings, so putting keywords in tiny text on a landing page H1 removes that page from searches for those keywords. On social media the impact is mostly contained — Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest don't run keyword search the way Google does. LinkedIn and YouTube are the exceptions.
Accessibility: Screen readers read tiny-text characters by their Unicode names instead of the underlying word. Fine for decorative use where the meaning is repeated in normal text nearby; don't use it for primary information screen-reader users need.
Can’t find the answer you’re looking for? Reach out to us on email: support@spurnow.com or whatsapp: +919599055272
A tool that converts regular text into Unicode characters that look smaller — superscript, subscript, and small caps. The output is real text (not images), so it copies and pastes anywhere that accepts text.
Anywhere that accepts Unicode text — Instagram bios and captions, Twitter/X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Discord, TikTok, comments, signatures, and statuses. Don't use it on web page headlines, app store listings, or anywhere a search engine needs to read your keywords.
No. Fonts are graphic data that has to be installed on the rendering device. Tiny text uses different Unicode characters that happen to look smaller — the same way emoji are characters, not fonts. That's why tiny text survives copy-paste across every platform.
Yes — Instagram bios are the most popular use case. Tiny text renders in bios, captions, comments, DMs, and Story text overlays. It's a recognised aesthetic choice for creator accounts.
On social media: minimal impact, since most social platforms don't run keyword indexing the way Google does. On web pages: significant impact — search engines treat ᵗⁱⁿʸ as a different string from "tiny", so tiny text on a landing page de-indexes your own keywords. Don't use it for SEO-relevant content.
No, and that's the biggest tradeoff. Screen readers read each tiny-text character by its Unicode name ("modifier letter small a…") instead of the underlying word. For accessibility-sensitive contexts, restate the meaning in plain text alongside the styled version.
Tiny text is the catch-all term. Small caps is one specific variant — uppercase letters at lowercase height (sᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘs). Small caps are easier to read at small sizes; pure superscript (ᵗⁱⁿʸ) feels more decorative.
Yes — Instagram bios fully support Unicode characters including all the small-text variants. The 150-character limit still applies, but tiny text visually fits more because each character feels smaller. A common pattern is to keep your name in normal text and use tiny text for subtitles.
Because superscript was originally added to Unicode for mathematical and linguistic notation, not decorative text. Some letters (q and x in particular) don't have superscript equivalents, so this tool falls back to the nearest approximation; the small-caps variant is more complete.
Spur turns every Instagram comment into a private DM, automates story-reaction replies, and uses an AI agent trained on your brand to handle "is this available?" messages instantly — then routes the warm leads to your shared inbox.
Try Spur free for 7 daysWorks with Instagram, WhatsApp, Facebook & web chat. No credit card.
AI-powered Instagram caption generation