free tool

SocialFormatter

Format text for Facebook, LinkedIn, X, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and any social network that does not support Markdown. Convert plain text into Unicode bold, italic, serif, gothic, script, and monospace styles that you can paste anywhere.

Sans serif
Serif
Other styles

Write your text

49 chars

Formatted result

49 chars

Social media formatting examples

LinkedIn hook

New case study: conversion rate is up 38%.

𝗡𝗲𝘄 𝗰𝗮𝘀𝗲 𝘀𝘁𝘂𝗱𝘆: conversion rate is up 38%.

Instagram caption

Limited drop tonight only.

𝓛𝓲𝓶𝓲𝓽𝓮𝓭 drop tonight only.

Code-oriented post

Use npm run build before deploy.

Use 𝚗𝚙𝚖 𝚛𝚞𝚗 𝚋𝚞𝚒𝚕𝚍 before deploy.

Unicode text formatter for social media posts

SocialFormatter helps creators, marketers, founders, recruiters, and community managers style social media posts without Markdown, HTML, or platform-specific formatting tools. Write your caption, select the part you want to emphasize, choose a Unicode style, then copy the formatted result into your post.

Use it as a bold text generator, italic text generator, script text converter, gothic font generator, monospace text formatter, or quick social media text editor for LinkedIn posts, Facebook updates, Instagram captions, X posts, TikTok bios, YouTube descriptions, and profile text.

The generated characters are Unicode symbols, so they usually survive copy and paste across apps. They are useful for visual emphasis, but they are not a replacement for semantic formatting: keep important content readable, avoid overusing decorative styles, and test the final post on the platform where you plan to publish it.

Frequently asked questions

Does SocialFormatter use Markdown or HTML?

No. It converts regular letters into Unicode characters that look bold, italic, script, gothic, or monospace. That makes the result pasteable on platforms that do not support Markdown.

Will formatted Unicode text work on every social network?

It usually works across major platforms, but rendering can vary by app, device, browser, and font support. Always preview important posts before publishing.

Is Unicode styling good for accessibility?

Use it sparingly. Screen readers and search systems may treat decorative Unicode characters differently from normal text, so keep critical content readable.

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