🐦 Twitter / X Fonts Generator

Your X profile gives you three styling surfaces: the display name above your handle, the 160-character bio beneath it, and the 280-character body of every post. A distinctive display name is what catches the eye in replies and search results, so that is usually the smartest place to spend a fancy style. The bio rewards brevity since decorated glyphs eat the 160-character allowance quickly. Posts can carry a styled hook, but the underlying Unicode still counts against 280 — and some characters count as more than one. Treat styling as emphasis, not a replacement for plain, scannable wording across your profile.

Your Twitter / X bio allows 160 characters. 0 / 160

Best fonts for Twitter / X

Hand-picked styles that look great and render reliably on Twitter / X.

𝗙𝗮𝗻𝗰𝘆 𝗧𝗲𝘅𝘁
𝐅𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐲 𝐓𝐞𝐱𝐭
F̶a̶n̶c̶y̶ T̶e̶x̶t̶
ʇxǝ⊥ ʎɔuɐℲ
𝙵𝚊𝚗𝚌𝚢 𝚃𝚎𝚡𝚝
ғᴀɴᴄʏ ᴛᴇxᴛ

All 36 Twitter / X font styles

Every font that works on Twitter / X, grouped by style. Type above to preview them all on your own text, then copy your favourite.

Bold Fonts (6)

𝐅𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐲 𝐓𝐞𝐱𝐭
𝗙𝗮𝗻𝗰𝘆 𝗧𝗲𝘅𝘁
𝓕𝓪𝓷𝓬𝔂 𝓣𝓮𝔁𝓽
𝑭𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒚 𝑻𝒆𝒙𝒕
𝙁𝙖𝙣𝙘𝙮 𝙏𝙚𝙭𝙩
🅵🅰🅽🅲🆈 🆃🅴🆇🆃

Viral Fonts (7)

Bubble →
🅕🅐🅝🅒🅨 🅣🅔🅧🅣
ʇxǝ⊥ ʎɔuɐℲ
Fancy Text
F̶a̶n̶c̶y̶ T̶e̶x̶t̶
Zalgo →
F̴̖̍̎a̴̖̍̎n̴̖̍̎c̴̖̍̎y̴̖̍̎ T̴̖̍̎e̴̖̍̎x̴̖̍̎t̴̖̍̎
Mirror →
Ⅎancy Text
▓𝙵▓𝚊▓𝚗▓𝚌▓𝚢▓ ▓𝚃▓𝚎▓𝚡▓𝚝▓

Cool Fonts (5)

𝙵𝚊𝚗𝚌𝚢 𝚃𝚎𝚡𝚝
F̲a̲n̲c̲y̲ T̲e̲x̲t̲
「Fancy Text」
𝔽𝕒𝕟𝕔𝕪 𝕋𝕖𝕩𝕥
ᶠᵃⁿᶜʸ ᵗᵉˣᵗ

Decorated Fonts (11)

Ⓕⓐⓝⓒⓨ Ⓣⓔⓧⓣ
𝔉𝔞𝔫𝔠𝔶 𝔗𝔢𝔵𝔱
♡ Fancy Text ♡
𝕱𝖆𝖓𝖈𝖞 𝕿𝖊𝖝𝖙
✦ Fancy Text ✦
✦ ℱ𝒶𝓃𝒸𝓎 𝒯ℯ𝓍𝓉 ✦
꒰Fancy Text꒱
🄵🄰🄽🄲🅈 🅃🄴🅇🅃
⚔ Fancy Text ⚔
fₐₙcy ₜₑₓₜ
⒡⒜⒩⒞⒴ ⒯⒠⒳⒯

Small Text Fonts (1)

ғᴀɴᴄʏ ᴛᴇxᴛ

Cursive Fonts (2)

Script →
ℱ𝒶𝓃𝒸𝓎 𝒯ℯ𝓍𝓉
Italic →
𝐹𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑦 𝑇𝑒𝑥𝑡

Aesthetic Fonts (1)

ℱ❀𝒶❀𝓃❀𝒸❀𝓎❀ ❀𝒯❀ℯ❀𝓍❀𝓉

Gothic Fonts (1)

❦ 𝓕𝓪𝓷𝓬𝔂 𝓣𝓮𝔁𝓽 ❦

Old English Fonts (2)

Runes →
ᚠᚨᚾᚲᛇ ᛏᛖᚲᛊᛏ
ᚠᚨᚾᚲᛇ ᛏᛖxᛏ

How to use Twitter fonts

Pick a style above, type the words you want, then copy the converted result. Inside X, open Edit profile and paste it into the Name field, which welcomes any Unicode glyph and gives you fifty characters to work with. A flourished display name catches attention in crowded reply threads and quote tweets, where most browsing actually happens. You can also drop styled fragments into the 280-character tweet box or your 160-character bio. Resist the urge to restyle the @handle directly beneath your name: that identifier stays locked to plain ASCII no matter what you paste. Treat the conversion as instant decoration that rides along with the characters themselves, needing no app, plugin, or follower setup on the other end.

Twitter bio tips & ideas

With only 160 characters in the bio, every glyph matters, and certain ornamental ones are surrogate pairs that quietly cost two or more slots toward both that limit and the 280 tweet ceiling. Open with one short styled phrase that frames who you are, then switch to clean letters for the role, link, or pitch readers scan fastest. Mirror that styled phrase in your display name so profile visitors see a coherent identity across both lines. Avoid decorating searchable keywords: X matches the raw code points behind glyphs, so a fancy version of "designer" never surfaces when someone types the ordinary spelling into search. Keep niche terms plain, spend the decoration on personality, and verify the finished bio on a phone before saving.

About Unicode text on Twitter

These styles are not a downloaded typeface; they are genuine Unicode characters from blocks the standard already defines, which is why a pasted name keeps its look as it moves through timelines, notifications, and embeds without any rendering help. That durability has trade-offs on X specifically. Screen readers announce each mathematical or enclosed glyph individually, so a heavily styled name can sound like a string of unrelated symbols to followers using assistive tech. Very obscure code points may collapse into empty boxes on older phones still reading your replies. And because the platform indexes literal code points, decorative spellings sit outside normal search and keyword matching entirely. Style the parts meant to be seen, and leave the parts meant to be found in plain form.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my fancy display name work but my @handle stays plain on X?

They are governed by different rules. The display name field accepts the full Unicode range, so styled glyphs stick there. The @handle is a system identifier restricted to basic ASCII letters, numbers, and underscores, so pasted decoration is stripped or rejected the moment you try to save it.

Do decorative glyphs use up extra characters in a 280-character tweet?

Some do. Many ornate symbols are encoded as surrogate pairs, meaning a single visible character counts as two or more units against the 280 limit. A short decorated phrase can therefore shrink your usable tweet space faster than the same words typed normally would.

Will a styled keyword in my bio still show up in Twitter search?

No. X search compares the underlying code points, not the shapes you see. A stylized version of a word is a completely different sequence of characters from the plain spelling people actually type, so it will not match their queries. Keep terms you want found in ordinary letters.

How do styled names look in replies and quote tweets?

They stand out noticeably. X is heavily text-driven, and a distinctive display name is one of the few visual signals in a dense reply thread or quote tweet. Used sparingly it draws the eye; overused across every word it becomes hard to read and can feel like noise.

Can followers using screen readers understand my decorated name?

Often not well. Assistive software reads each fancy glyph as its individual Unicode value rather than as a normal letter, so a styled name may be announced as a long run of disconnected symbol descriptions. If accessibility matters to your audience, keep at least a plain version visible somewhere.

Where exactly in the X app do I paste the converted text?

Go to your profile, tap Edit profile, and select the Name field for a styled display name, or the Bio field for profile copy. For a tweet, paste straight into the compose box. Save changes and the decorated characters appear instantly to everyone viewing it.

Will my styled tweet show correctly on someone else’s old phone?

Common styles usually render fine, but rare or obscure code points can appear as empty rectangles on dated devices with limited font coverage. Since you cannot control what hardware your followers use, favor widely supported styles for anything you genuinely need every reader to see clearly.

Does a fancy display name help my account get discovered on X?

Not through search, since stylized characters fall outside keyword matching. Its value is purely visual recognition: a memorable name people notice and remember from threads. Pair the decoration with plain, searchable terms in your bio so discovery and personality both work instead of competing.