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Symbols & Emoji

Tap any symbol, border or kaomoji to copy it instantly — hearts, stars, arrows and more for your bios, captions and usernames.

To use a decorative symbol, tap it in the grid below and it copies to your clipboard instantly — then paste it anywhere. These are standard Unicode characters, so a heart ♡ or arrow → pastes into most apps. Everything happens in your browser; nothing is stored.

Hearts

Stars

Arrows

Brackets

Sparkles & dots

Borders & lines

Kaomoji

Currency & misc

Where it works (and where it breaks): these are real Unicode symbols, so they copy and paste into most bios, captions and usernames. Some symbols render as a colorful emoji on one platform and a plain glyph on another, and rarer ones may show as empty boxes (▯) on older devices — preview before posting. Accessibility caveat: screen readers may announce each symbol by name or skip it, so keep your real message in plain text and use symbols as light decoration.

Symbols and kaomoji are decorative Unicode characters — hearts, stars, arrows, brackets and emoticons — that you can tap to copy and paste anywhere. Unlike a font generator, there's nothing to type: you pick a ready-made symbol and drop it into a bio, caption or username.

Key takeaways

  • Tap to copy — each tile flashes "Copied!" with no typing or selecting.
  • Organized by category — hearts, stars, arrows, brackets, borders, kaomoji.
  • Real Unicode, so it pastes into bios, captions and chats.
  • Looks vary by platform — some show as color emoji, some as plain glyphs.
  • Keep it light — symbols are decoration; keep your message plain.

How copy-and-paste symbols work

Every symbol on this page is a single Unicode character (or, for kaomoji, a short string of them). Unicode assigns a number to each one, and your device draws it with whatever glyph it has installed. Because there's no font file involved, the character travels with the text when you copy it — paste it into Instagram, TikTok, Discord, a game name or a document and it shows up wherever that glyph is supported.

What's in the grid

CategoryExamplesGood for
Hearts♡ ♥ ❥ ღSoft, romantic bio accents
Stars★ ✦ ✧ ⋆Aesthetic sparkle
Arrows→ ➤ ↳Pointing to a link or CTA
Borders꒰꒱ ⊰ ⊱Framing a name or line
Kaomoji¯\_(ツ)_/¯ (◕‿◕)Playful comments and chats

Where else to find decoration

For corrupted, glitchy effects, try the Zalgo glitch generator. To style your actual letters, use the fancy text generator.

Frequently asked questions

How do I copy a symbol?

Just tap any symbol or kaomoji in the grid above. It is copied to your clipboard instantly and the tile flashes "Copied!" — then paste it wherever you need it. There is nothing to type or select.

Where do these symbols come from?

They are standard Unicode characters — the same global set that holds letters and emoji. That is why a heart ♡ or arrow → looks the same in most apps and can be pasted into bios, captions and usernames.

What is a kaomoji?

A kaomoji is a Japanese-style emoticon built from regular characters, like ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ or (◕‿◕). Because they are just text symbols strung together, you copy and paste them exactly like a single character.

Why do some symbols show as boxes or look different?

A box (▯) means the app or device has no glyph for that exact character; some symbols also render as a colorful emoji on one platform and a plain black-and-white glyph on another. Stick to common symbols for the most consistent look.

Are decorative symbols bad for accessibility?

They can be. Screen readers may announce a symbol by its Unicode name or skip it, and a bio wrapped in borders can be noisy to listen to. Use symbols as light decoration and keep your actual message in plain text.

Is FontWild free and is my data private?

It is completely free with no signup. Copying happens entirely in your browser — nothing is sent to a server or stored.

These symbols use standard Unicode code points across several blocks (Miscellaneous Symbols, Arrows, CJK punctuation and more). Rendering — including whether a symbol appears as color emoji or a plain glyph — depends on each device's installed fonts.

Last reviewed 2026-06-28

FontWild symbols are real Unicode characters, not images or a font. They render only where the device and app support the matching glyphs, may appear as boxes elsewhere, and can look different across platforms. Decorative symbols can be noisy or confusing for screen readers — keep important information in plain text.