Superscript Generator – Copy & Paste Unicode Superscript Text

Generate superscript Unicode text instantly. Free online tool for math (x²), chemistry (H₂O), exponents (10⁶), and social bios—copy paste, no signup.

About Superscript Generator

Unicode superscript maps normal digits and letters to raised code points (for example ², ³, ⁿ). Unlike HTML <sup> tags, these characters paste as plain text into Instagram bios, tweets, Discord, and documents that do not render HTML.

How to Use Superscript Generator

Type or paste text (digits and letters superscript best). Review the raised Unicode output in the preview panel. Copy the result and paste into your bio, post, note, or spreadsheet. For chemistry or math, verify the exact characters match your style guide.

When to Use Superscript Generator

Math & science: Exponents, powers, and footnote markers in study notes. Social media: Decorative bios on Instagram, X (Twitter), and TikTok profiles. Trademarks: TM or ordinal markers where Unicode superscript is accepted. Accessibility note: Prefer HTML <sup> in formal web articles; use Unicode where rich text is unavailable.

Why Use This Superscript Generator?

Manually hunting superscript characters in character maps is slow. This tool applies the full Unicode superscript map in one pass, locally in your browser, with nothing uploaded.

Unicode vs HTML formatting

HTML superscript (<sup>2</sup>) only works where HTML is rendered. Unicode superscript (x²) travels as real characters, so it survives copy-paste into chat apps, PDFs, and plain-text fields. This generator outputs Unicode, not markup.

Platform compatibility

Instagram and Twitter/X bios often accept Unicode superscript for stylistic exponents. Discord and WhatsApp generally display it; avoid overlong strings on platforms with character limits. Screen readers may read superscript digits oddly—use sparingly for essential notation, not entire sentences.

Examples

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between HTML superscript and Unicode superscript?

HTML <sup> needs a renderer that understands HTML. Unicode superscript characters are plain text and paste into almost any app.

Can I use superscript on Instagram or Twitter?

Many profiles display Unicode superscript in bios and names. Test on your device; some fonts hide rare code points.

Does this work for scientific notation?

Yes for common patterns like 10⁶ or x². Complex equations may still need LaTeX or equation editors.

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