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Small Text Generator

Shrink your text down with superscript, small caps, and parenthesized styles. These tiny Unicode characters work anywhere you can paste text - no special apps needed.

32 characters|6 words
Superscript (Tiny Text)
ᵀʰⁱˢ ⁱˢ ᵗʰᵉ ˢᵐᵃˡˡ ᵀᵉˣᵗ ᴳᵉⁿᵉʳᵃᵗᵒʳ
Small Caps
ᴛʜɪꜱ ɪꜱ ᴛʜᴇ ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴛᴇxᴛ ɢᴇɴᴇʀᴀᴛᴏʀ
Parenthesized
⒯⒣⒤⒮ ⒤⒮ ⒯⒣⒠ ⒮⒨⒜⒧⒧ ⒯⒠⒳⒯ ⒢⒠⒩⒠⒭⒜⒯⒪⒭

Sometimes you don't want your text to be bigger or bolder. You want it smaller. Maybe it's a side note in your bio, a whisper effect in a post, or you just think tiny text looks cool. Whatever the reason, this small text generator converts your regular letters into miniature Unicode characters that you can copy and paste anywhere.

These aren't just resized fonts - they're actual Unicode characters that naturally appear smaller than normal letters. That means they keep their size no matter where you paste them. Instagram, Twitter, Discord, TikTok, Facebook - they all display these characters the same way.

How to Use the Small Text Generator

Just type or paste your text into the box above. You'll see three different small text styles right away: superscript, small caps, and parenthesized. Each one has a different look and feel, so try them all and pick whichever fits what you're going for. Then hit the copy button and paste it wherever you want. Simple as that.

The Three Small Text Styles

Superscript (Tiny Text) is the most popular small text style and for good reason. It sits above the normal text line - similar to how exponents look in math (like x²). The letters are genuinely tiny and look clean, which is why people use it constantly in Instagram bios and Twitter display names. If you want that minimalist, understated look, this is the one to go with.

Small Caps are exactly what they sound like - capital letters that are the height of lowercase letters. ᴛʜᴇʏ ʟᴏᴏᴋ ʟɪᴋᴇ ᴛʜɪꜱ. You've probably seen this style in book chapter headings, legal documents, and high-end print layouts. On social media, small caps give your text a polished, put-together feel without going over the top. It's subtle but distinctive.

Parenthesized letters wrap each character in parentheses, like ⒣⒠⒧⒧⒪. It's a more playful and decorative style that works well for casual posts, display names, or anywhere you want something a bit quirky. Each letter sits inside its own little container, which gives the text a unique visual rhythm.

Where Small Text Works Best

Small text is surprisingly versatile. In Instagram bios, superscript text creates a whisper effect that makes people lean in and actually read what you wrote. On Twitter, tiny text in your display name or bio stands out precisely because everyone else's name is full-sized. And in Discord, mixing small text into your messages adds tone and personality that plain text just doesn't have.

One popular trick is combining small text with regular-sized text. Write your main message in normal letters, then add a tiny superscript note underneath or beside it. The visual contrast draws attention naturally - your eyes go straight to the size difference.

A Few Things to Know

Most common letters are well-covered in Unicode's small character sets, but you might notice a few characters that don't shrink as neatly as others. Numbers and special characters generally stay at their regular size. Different devices and fonts can also render small text slightly differently, so it's worth checking how your text looks on a couple of platforms before committing to a style.

Want more text styles beyond small? Check out our fancy text generator for 20+ font styles, or try the bold text generator if you'd rather go bigger instead of smaller. We also have a cursive font generator and an italic text generator if you want something with more flair.