Bubble Text Generator

Turn plain letters into the circled “bubble” versions that Unicode calls enclosed alphanumerics — each letter sitting inside its own round outline (Ⓐ Ⓑ Ⓒ). Pop them into Instagram bios, Twitter posts, Discord statuses, TikTok captions or anywhere else that takes Unicode, and your text will stand out without uploading any images.

How to convert text to bubble letters

  1. 1

    Type or paste your text

    English letters A-Z and digits 0-9 are supported. Spaces and punctuation stay as standard characters.

  2. 2

    Choose the bubble style

    Outlined bubbles (Ⓐ Ⓑ), solid filled bubbles (🅐 🅑 — negative circled), or lowercase-only (ⓐ ⓑ).

  3. 3

    Preview the converted text

    Each letter maps to the corresponding Unicode glyph in the Enclosed Alphanumerics block.

  4. 4

    Copy to clipboard

    Paste anywhere — the characters are real Unicode, not an image, so they flow with the surrounding text.

The three bubble sets

Input Outlined Filled (negative) Lowercase
A 🅐
B 🅑
M 🅜
Z 🅩
0
1
9

All live in the Unicode Enclosed Alphanumerics (U+2460-U+24FF) and Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement (U+1F100-U+1F1FF) blocks.

Where bubble text works

  • Instagram: bios, captions, comments, Reels text.
  • Twitter/X: posts, bio, display name.
  • TikTok: captions, bio.
  • Discord: message body, statuses, channel names.
  • YouTube: video titles (partial), channel descriptions.
  • WhatsApp: messages, group names (display only).

Where it breaks

  • Screen readers spell out “circled Latin capital letter A” — avoid full sentences of bubble text for accessibility.
  • Search indexing: Google treats these as distinct characters; bubble versions of your brand name do not share ranking with the plain form.
  • Some older Android keyboards render the filled set as boxes. Test on the target platform before publishing.
  • URLs and hashtags: must stay in plain ASCII. Do not bubble-ify #yourtag.

Good use cases

  • Emphasising one or two words in an otherwise-plain caption.
  • Stylising a handle or a section header in a bio.
  • Themed posts (retro, playful, kids-focused).
  • Artistic replies in chat — used sparingly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. iOS renders the Enclosed Alphanumerics block cleanly in Messages, Notes, Safari, Instagram and every major app.

They’re the same thing — both refer to enclosed-alphanumeric Unicode. Some generators add hollow/solid/3D variants; this one covers the three standard sets.

Technically yes, but Unicode-styled text is not suitable for a polished logo — use real typography in a vector tool. Bubble letters shine in casual social contexts, not brand identity.

Unicode only defines filled negative circled digits 0-9 (and a few extended to 20). For 10 onwards, only the outlined style is consistently supported across platforms.

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