Small Text Generator – Copy & Paste Small Tiny Text

Turn normal words into ˢᵘᵖᵉʳ ˢᵐᵃˡˡ text — type below, then copy and paste it anywhere.

A small text generator instantly shrinks your words into tiny characters you can copy and paste anywhere — no app, no sign-up. Type once and get your text as tiny superscript, subscript, and small caps, then drop it into a bio, username, or caption to make it stand out.

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What is a Small Text Generator?

A small text generator — also called a tiny text generator — converts your normal letters into miniature characters that look like shrunken text. You type a word once, and the tool instantly shows it in tiny styles you can copy and paste anywhere, with no app and no account.

These aren’t a smaller font size. They’re separate tiny characters that already exist on every modern phone, computer, and browser, which is why your super small text (tiny text) looks the same to everyone who sees it.

How Small Text Actually Works

Unicode — the universal system behind every letter, number, and emoji — includes ready-made “small” character sets: superscript (ᵗⁱⁿʸ), subscript (ₜᵢₙy), and small caps (sᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘs). The generator swaps each normal letter for its tiny counterpart from those sets.

Because the result is made of real characters and not a shrunken image or a CSS text size, you can paste it into places that don’t even let you change text size — like an Instagram bio or a username field. That’s what makes it feel like an extremely small font generator, even though nothing is installed and no real font is changed.

How to Use It

  1. Type your text — enter a name, word, or sentence in the box above.
  2. Pick a style — choose Tiny Text, Subscript, or Small Caps.
  3. Copy and paste — tap Copy and paste your tiny text anywhere you can type.

Small Font Styles You Can Copy and Paste

This tool gives you three tiny font styles to copy and paste:

  • Tiny Text (Superscript) — raised mini letters, the classic “small font” look and the most complete style.
  • Subscript — mini letters that sit low on the line, like the small numbers in a chemistry formula.
  • Small Caps — full-size capital shapes shrunk to lowercase height for a clean, compact look.

The Full Small-Text Alphabet

Here’s exactly which letters each style can produce, so you know what to expect before you type:

  • Small Caps: ᴀ ʙ ᴄ ᴅ ᴇ ꜰ ɢ ʜ ɪ ᴊ ᴋ ʟ ᴍ ɴ ᴏ ᴘ ǫ ʀ ꜱ ᴛ ᴜ ᴠ ᴡ x ʏ ᴢ
  • Superscript: ᵃ ᵇ ᶜ ᵈ ᵉ ᶠ ᵍ ʰ ⁱ ʲ ᵏ ˡ ᵐ ⁿ ᵒ ᵖ q ʳ ˢ ᵗ ᵘ ᵛ ʷ ˣ ʸ ᶻ
  • Subscript: ₐ b c d ₑ f g ₕ ᵢ j ₖ ₗ ₘ ₙ ₒ ₚ q ᵣ ₛ ₜ ᵤ ᵥ w ₓ y z

Small caps are the most complete — every letter has a small-cap form (a few, like Q and X, just look a little different). Superscript covers the whole alphabet, too. Subscript is the gappy one.

Related tools: Want a different look? Try the weird text generator for glitchy, upside-down, and mixed styles, or the cursed text generator for a creepy zalgo effect.

Why Some Letters Stay Normal-Sized

Here’s something most small font generators don’t explain clearly: Unicode doesn’t include a tiny version of every letter. These characters were added over time for maths and phonetics, not to complete the alphabet, so some are simply missing.

Subscript is missing several letters — b, c, d, f, g, q, w, y, and z — so in the subscript those appear at normal size while the rest shrink. Superscript covers everything except a true “q” (most tools substitute a close look-alike). This isn’t a fault in the tool; the characters don’t exist in Unicode, so no generator can produce them. If you want every letter tiny, use the Tiny Text (Superscript) style — it’s the most complete.

Want Small Text on Your Own Website or Document?

If you control the code (your own site, a doc, an email signature), you don’t need Unicode tricks — you can use the proper built-in methods:

  • Small caps in CSS: font-variant: small-caps; Renders real small caps cleanly.
  • Superscript/subscript in HTML: wrap text in <sup>…</sup> or <sub>…</sub>.

These look sharper and are more accessible — but they only work where you can edit the HTML or CSS. In a social bio, a username field, or a chat app, you can’t, which is exactly why the copy-and-paste Unicode tool above exists.

Where to Use Super Small Text

Because the characters are standard Unicode, you can paste your tiny text almost anywhere you type — bios and profiles (Instagram, X, TikTok, Tumblr), usernames and display names, and captions, comments, and chats for a subtle, aesthetic touch.

A couple of platform notes worth knowing:

  • Reddit has its own shortcut — type ^ Before a word to make it superscript in a comment, so you don’t need a generator there.
  • Some sites block special Unicode characters, so occasionally your small text won’t paste or will show as plain text. That’s the site owner’s rule, not a problem with the tool — try a different field or platform.

Frequently Asked Questions about Small / Tiny Text Generator

Is the small text generator free? Yes. It’s completely free, with no sign-up and no limit on how much text you convert.

Will tiny text work on Instagram, TikTok, and Discord? Yes. It’s standard Unicode, so it displays in bios, captions, usernames, and chats across all major platforms.

Why don’t some of my letters get smaller? A few letters have no subscript version in Unicode, so they stay normal-sized in that style. Switch to Tiny Text (Superscript), which covers the whole alphabet.

Why won’t my tiny text paste on a certain site? Some sites block or strip special Unicode characters. That’s a rule set by that site, not a fault in the tool — try a different field or platform.

Is this an actual smaller font? No — they’re tiny Unicode characters that look like a small font. That’s exactly why you can copy and paste them without installing anything.

What’s another name for small text? People also call it tiny text, mini text, or (loosely) fancy or cool text. The tool is sometimes called a tiny text generator or small font generator.

Is there a character limit? Not in this tool — type as much as you want. The app you paste into may apply its own limit.

Bottom Line

Type your text, pick Tiny Text, Subscript, or Small Caps, and copy it — that’s all it takes to turn normal words into super small text you can paste anywhere. For the most complete result, where every letter shrinks, go with the Tiny Text style.