Small Caps Generator
Convert text into small caps lettering.
How to use Small Caps Generator
What this tool does
The Small Caps Generator converts lowercase letters (and uppercase ones, after normalising them to lowercase) into their Unicode small-capital equivalents: ᴀ ʙ ᴄ ᴅ ᴇ and so on. The result looks like a line set entirely in small capitals — a typographic style associated with elegance, formality, and authority — but it is just plain text, so it pastes anywhere Unicode is accepted. Numbers, punctuation, spaces, and characters with no small-cap equivalent are left unchanged. The tool updates in real time with every keystroke, all in your browser.
Why you might need it
Small caps have a long history in book design, newspaper mastheads, and formal documents. Traditionally they required a specifically drawn font variant or a separate set of metal type. For digital text outside a designed document, they were simply not available to writers and content creators. Unicode small-cap characters change that: you can write in small caps in a social media bio, a chat username, a Discord server name, a slide deck, or a text message, with no font dependency.
The style works particularly well for short display text. A bio that reads in small caps immediately looks more considered than one in plain lowercase or SHOUTING ALL-CAPS. Headings, labels, product names, and phrases that need a formal or authoritative tone benefit from the same treatment. Musicians, authors, academics, and brands use small caps for exactly this reason.
From a practical standpoint, because the characters are real Unicode text rather than images, they remain fully selectable, searchable, and accessible to copy-and-paste. They also scale naturally with font size and respond to browser zoom, which styled images cannot.
How to use it
- Type or paste your text into the input box.
- The small-caps output updates live with every keystroke — no button to press.
- Click Copy to copy the result to your clipboard.
- Paste it into your bio, username, document, presentation, or message.
- Use Load sample to see a quick example, or Clear to reset.
Common pitfalls
A few letters — including Q and X — have no dedicated small-cap code point in Unicode, so those characters appear unchanged. In most text this is barely noticeable because the surrounding letters carry the small-caps style, but if your text contains many of these letters the effect will be less uniform.
Unicode decorative text, including small caps, is not always read correctly by assistive technology. Screen readers may announce each character by its Unicode name rather than its phonetic value, or skip them, or read the base letter. Because the original text is preserved in the input box, anyone using a screen reader on this tool still has access to the plain readable version. However, when you paste small-caps text into a post or document that others read, recipients using assistive technology may hear unexpected output. Small caps suit bios, headings, and display labels — contexts where decorative presentation takes priority — rather than body copy that needs to be universally readable.
Tips and advanced use
Short lines work best: a username, a tagline, a section heading, or a pull quote. Long paragraphs in small caps become difficult to read, because the eye expects the normal distinction between uppercase and lowercase to carry meaning in running text. Use the style selectively for maximum impact.
If you want to mix large initial capitals with small-caps body — a traditional typographic drop-cap effect approximated in plain text — type the first letter normally and convert the rest. For example, type a capital T, then convert “he quick brown fox” to small caps and combine them in your destination app.
For a broader range of Unicode text effects — bold, italic, script, fraktur, and double-struck styles in addition to small caps — the Fancy Text Generator on this site applies over twenty transformations at once and lets you pick your favourite in one place.
Frequently asked questions
Is my text sent to any server?
Why do some letters look the same as normal text?
Can I use this in my Instagram or LinkedIn bio?
Does this affect uppercase letters?
How is this different from CSS font-variant: small-caps?
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