Tik Text / Subscript Text
Subscript Text Generator
Subscript text generator turns your characters into small, lowered Unicode characters (like ₐ ₑ ₒ ₓ and ₁ ₂ ₃) that sit below the baseline and copy-paste anywhere — no font file needed, because the style lives in the character itself. The catch: Unicode's subscript set is even more incomplete than superscript, so several common letters (b, c, d, f, g, q, w, y and the capitals) simply have no subscript form and stay normal-size.
How to use subscript text
Use subscript characters for short decorative touches — a lowered word in a bio, a tiny tag after a username, or chemistry-style notation like H₂O and CO₂ where the digits all exist. Practical tip: type your text, then visually scan the output for any letters that came back full-size, and either reword to avoid them or accept the mixed look on purpose. The honest caveat: because so many letters lack a subscript glyph, this only works cleanly for digits and a handful of vowels and consonants — it's a niche style, not a way to shrink whole words, and screen readers will read each character aloud individually.
FAQ
Why are some of my subscript letters still normal size?
Unicode only defines subscript forms for a limited set of characters — mostly digits 0–9, a few vowels (a, e, o), and scattered consonants. Letters like b, c, d, f, g, q, w, y and every capital have no subscript version, so they fall back to their regular size.
Can I write whole words in subscript text?
Not reliably. The subscript alphabet has too many gaps, so most words come out as a mix of lowered and normal characters. It's best for digits and short notations like x₁ or H₂O rather than full words.
Does subscript text work in social media bios and usernames?
Yes — these are real Unicode characters, so the styling survives copy-and-paste into TikTok, Instagram and Discord bios. Just keep it short, and check on your own device first, since a few older phones or apps display unsupported characters as empty boxes.