Bubble Text Generator
Turn your regular text into bubble letters - circled, filled, and squared Unicode characters that work everywhere you can paste text.
Bubble text is one of those styles that catches your eye immediately. Each letter sits inside its own circle or square, giving your words a rounded, badge-like look that's hard to scroll past. Whether you're updating your Instagram bio, setting up a Discord username, or adding flair to a tweet, bubble letters make your text feel intentional and designed - even though all you did was copy and paste.
These aren't images or special fonts that only work in certain apps. They're real Unicode characters baked into the text standard, so they show up on pretty much every device and platform out there. That's what makes them so useful.
How to Use the Bubble Text Generator
Type or paste whatever you want into the text box above. You'll instantly see your text converted into four different bubble styles. Browse through them, find the one you like, and hit the copy button. Then just paste it wherever you need it. The whole thing takes about five seconds.
The Four Bubble Text Styles
Bubble Text (Circled) wraps each letter in a thin circle outline, like Ⓗⓔⓛⓛⓞ. This is the classic bubble letter style that most people picture when they think of circled text. It's clean and readable, with uppercase and lowercase characters both getting their own distinct circled forms. You see this style everywhere - social media bios, messaging apps, and forum signatures.
Dark Bubble (Filled Circle) puts each letter inside a solid filled circle, like 🅗🅔🅛🅛🅞. The white letter on a dark background creates strong contrast and makes your text pop off the page. It's bolder and more attention-grabbing than the outlined version, which is why people love using it for usernames and display names where they want maximum visibility.
Negative Squared places your letters inside filled squares, like 🅷🅴🅻🅻🅾. Think of those letter tiles you see on game shows or word games. It gives your text a blocky, structured feel that looks great for headers, labels, and anywhere you want that organized grid aesthetic. The filled background really makes each letter stand out.
Squared puts letters in outlined square frames, like 🄷🄴🄻🄻🄾. It's a softer version of the negative squared style - same structure but without the heavy fill. This works well when you want the squared shape but prefer something that doesn't overpower the surrounding text.
Where to Use Bubble Text
Bubble letters work especially well in places where you can't change the actual font. Instagram is probably the biggest use case - your bio, comments, and captions all support these characters, and they're one of the easiest ways to make your profile look different from everyone else's. The circled style is popular for Instagram bios because it's decorative without being hard to read.
On Twitter/X, bubble text in your display name grabs attention in people's timelines. The filled versions (dark bubble and negative squared) work particularly well here because they create strong visual contrast against the plain text of other accounts. Just keep in mind that some of these characters are wider than regular letters, so you'll use up your character count faster.
Discord is another place where bubble text shines. Nicknames, channel descriptions, and messages all render these characters just fine. A lot of server owners use squared text for channel categories or role names to give their server a more organized, polished look.
Good to Know
A few things worth mentioning. Bubble text only covers the standard Latin alphabet (A-Z). Numbers, punctuation, and special characters will stay as their regular selves. That's just how the Unicode standard works - these circled characters were defined only for letters.
The filled styles (dark bubble and negative squared) use characters from a newer section of Unicode, so there's a small chance they won't display correctly on older devices or certain operating systems. If you're sending bubble text to someone and they see empty boxes instead of letters, that's probably why. The outlined circled style has the widest compatibility since it's been in Unicode the longest.
Looking for more ways to style your text? Our fancy text generator has over 20 different Unicode font styles to choose from. Or try something more specific like the bold text generator, italic text generator, or small text generator. You might also like the cursive font generator for a completely different vibe.