Superscript Generator — Convert Text to Superscript (Tiny Text Above the Line)

Superscript Generator

Convert any text to superscript Unicode (ᵗⁱⁿʸ ᵃᵇᵒᵛᵉ ᵗʰᵉ ˡⁱⁿᵉ). Works in Twitter/X bios, Instagram captions, math equations, citation references, and chemistry formulas — anywhere HTML tags get stripped.

Your Text

Superscript Output

How to use the Superscript Generator

Type any text in the input box. The tool maps each letter and digit to its Unicode superscript equivalent. Punctuation and unsupported characters pass through unchanged. Copy the output and paste anywhere — Twitter, Instagram, email, Word, PowerPoint, code comments.

Why this tool matters

HTML tags get stripped by most social platforms, email subject lines, and chat apps. Unicode superscript characters survive because they are real Unicode codepoints, not formatting markup. This makes them indispensable for citations (¹ ² ³), exponents (10²), trademark and copyright marks, and any context where you need raised text without HTML.

Common use cases

  • Citation references in social media posts and email newsletters
  • Math equations: E = mc², 10⁶, x²+y²=z²
  • Chemistry formulas: H₂O, CO₂ (subscript) and isotope notation ¹²C, ²³⁵U
  • Trademark and copyright marks: Brand™, Product®
  • Footnote markers in long-form social posts and Substack articles
  • LaTeX-free math notation in chat apps and code comments

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are some characters missing?
Unicode does not have superscript versions of every letter — q, F, and some symbols simply do not exist in the superscript block. Our tool passes them through unchanged.

Can I use superscript for footnote markers?
Yes — Unicode superscripts ¹ ² ³ render correctly in almost every modern context, including web, mobile, and email. They are perfect for academic-style footnote markers without HTML.

Will superscript text work in Excel or Google Sheets?
Yes for display. For formulas you should still use Excel\u2019s native formatting because Unicode superscripts will not auto-convert to actual numbers.

Does superscript affect SEO?
Unicode superscripts are technically text. Search engines index them but may treat them as separate characters from their normal-size counterparts. Use them for display, not for ranking keywords.

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