LFText Formatter

Unicode tiny text converter

Small Text Generator

Generate superscript, subscript, and small-cap Unicode text at the same time, with character-coverage feedback and individual copy controls.

Superscript

All supported characters converted

ˢᵐᵃˡˡ ᵗᵉˣᵗ ᶠᵒʳ ᵖʳᵒᶠⁱˡᵉˢ ᵃⁿᵈ ⁿᵒᵗᵉˢ ¹²³

Subscript

3 unsupported Latin character(s) stayed unchanged

ₛₘₐₗₗ ₜₑₓₜ fₒᵣ ₚᵣₒfᵢₗₑₛ ₐₙd ₙₒₜₑₛ ₁₂₃

Small Caps

3 unsupported Latin character(s) stayed unchanged

ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴛᴇxᴛ ꜰᴏʀ ᴘʀᴏꜰɪʟᴇꜱ ᴀɴᴅ ɴᴏᴛᴇꜱ 123

Why use this Small Text Generator?

Compare multiple small styles

See superscript, subscript, and small caps without converting the input repeatedly.

Know what cannot convert

Coverage feedback identifies Latin letters that stay unchanged.

Copy results independently

Use one small-text form without losing the normal source.

Keep spaces and punctuation

Sentence structure remains intact while supported characters change.

Use text across applications

Paste Unicode output into profiles, labels, notes, and compatible chat fields.

Understand the difference

Learn why small Unicode characters are not the same as reducing font size.

How it works

1

Enter normal text

Type a word, label, number, or short sentence.

2

Compare generated styles

Review superscript, subscript, and small-cap character coverage.

3

Copy one result

Paste the chosen Unicode text into a compatible application.

How small Unicode text works

Small Text Generator is a general Unicode converter, not a Discord formatter. It focuses on superscript, subscript, and small caps for compatible profiles, labels, notes, and social fields.

Small text generators map ordinary characters to existing Unicode glyphs such as superscript numbers, phonetic modifier letters, subscript symbols, and small-cap forms. They do not change CSS font size.

Unicode was not designed to provide a complete decorative alphabet in every style. Superscript and subscript coverage is especially uneven, which is why a few letters remain unchanged. The coverage notice makes those gaps visible before you copy.

Superscript is useful for exponents, footnote-like labels, and decorative secondary text. Subscript can represent simple scientific notation where supported. Small caps work well for compact labels, but plain text remains better for accessibility and search.

Small text conversion coverage

Unicode coverage differs by style. Unsupported letters remain unchanged so the result stays copyable instead of silently removing content.

StyleTypical coverageBest for
SuperscriptMost lowercase letters and all digits; several letters are approximationsFootnote-like labels and decorative secondary text
SubscriptDigits plus a limited lowercase alphabetSimple formula-like text and short labels
Small capsBroad Latin lowercase coverage with visual approximationsCompact headings and profile labels

No Unicode small-text style provides a complete alphabet for every language. The generator reports unsupported Latin characters for each output.

Practical examples

Superscript label

Create a small secondary word.

early access → ᵉᵃʳˡʸ ᵃᶜᶜᵉˢˢ

Subscript number

Represent a simple formula-like label.

H2O → H₂O

Small caps heading

Create a compact visual heading.

notes → ɴᴏᴛᴇꜱ

Important limitations

Unicode does not include a complete superscript, subscript, or small-cap alphabet.

Small characters can reduce legibility and may be announced unexpectedly by assistive technology.

Appearance varies by operating system, application, and fallback font.

Some websites restrict unusual Unicode characters in usernames, identifiers, or search fields.

FAQ

Is small text an actual smaller font?

No. It uses Unicode characters that are designed with smaller or raised shapes.

Why do some letters stay normal?

Unicode does not provide matching small variants for every letter in each style.

Can I copy small text into social media?

Often yes, where the field accepts those Unicode characters. Rendering and naming rules vary by platform.

What is the difference between superscript and subscript?

Superscript characters sit visually higher; subscript characters sit lower and have more limited letter coverage.

How is this different from Small Text Discord?

This tool generates general Unicode small text. Small Text Discord focuses on Discord's native -# subtext syntax and Discord-specific preview.

Is small text accessible?

Not always. Use it sparingly and keep essential information available in ordinary text.