Small Caps Generator

Convert text to ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ, where lowercase letters become small capital letters of an even height. It reads as clean, calm and a little formal, and copies and pastes anywhere. Free and instant, with no sign-up.

  • Copies and pastes anywhere
  • 100% free
  • No sign-up, no app
  • Works on phone and desktop
  • Unlimited text, no limits
Read the guide: How to Make Small Caps
Your text

Tap any row to copy it. These are Unicode characters, so they paste into most apps — though a few places (and some older devices) may not show every style.

How to use it

  1. 1

    Type your text

    Type or paste your words into the box. The styled versions update as you type.

  2. 2

    Pick a style

    Browse the styled results and find the look you want.

  3. 3

    Tap to copy

    Tap the style to copy it, then paste it anywhere: a bio, caption, username or message.

When it comes in handy

Understated headings

Use small caps for a bio heading or a label that feels designed rather than shouted.

Clean labels

Tag a section or a category in a calm, typographic style.

Quiet emphasis

Mark a word or phrase without the loudness of full capitals or bold.

Instant & 100% private — nothing is uploaded

The styling happens right here in your browser. Your text is never sent to a server, so there is no sign-up, no email wall, and no length cap from us. Load the page once and it keeps working even if you go offline.

Frequently asked questions

Why do a couple of letters stay normal?
Unicode has small-capital characters for almost every letter, but a few, notably x, have no dedicated small-cap glyph. Those letters are left as their nearest match so the word still reads correctly, which is the same approach every small-caps tool takes.
When should I use small caps instead of bold?
Small caps are quieter than bold. They suit a label, a heading or a name where you want a designed, even look rather than strong emphasis. Bold pulls the eye harder; small caps simply feel considered.
Are these real fonts, and will they work everywhere?
They are not font files. Each style is made of real Unicode characters that look like a styled font, which is why you can copy them and paste them straight into a bio, post or message without installing anything. Because they are normal characters, they show up in most apps and on most devices. A few places that strip formatting, and some older phones, may show plain boxes for the rarer styles, so it is worth pasting a sample where you plan to use it.