Superscript & Subscript Generator — Unicode Text Converter

Our superscript and subscript generator converts letters and numbers to their Unicode equivalents — creating text that appears raised (superscript) or lowered (subscript) without any HTML or CSS. The subscript and superscript generator is perfect for writing math notation like x squared, chemical formulas like H2O or CO2, footnotes, ordinals, and styled social media text. These Unicode characters copy-paste into any app — Twitter, Instagram, Discord, Word, and everywhere else. Use it as a free superscript generator for science, math, or creative writing.

Superscript & Subscript Generator
TextFree · No signup
↑ Converts letters and numbers to their Unicode superscript equivalents. Great for footnotes, math, and social posts like H²O.
0characters · Draft auto-saved
Quick Examples
Pythagorean
ˣ²⁺ʸ²⁼ᶻ²
Einstein
ᴱ⁼ᵐᶜ²
Ordinal
¹⁰ᵗʰ
💡 Note: Not all letters have official Unicode superscript/subscript versions. Unsupported characters are kept as-is. Use this superscript and subscript generator for math notation, chemistry formulas, footnotes, and styled social media text.
Guide

How to Use Superscript & Subscript Generator

Choose Superscript or Subscript

Click the Superscript tab to raise text, or Subscript to lower it.

Type Your Text

Enter letters, numbers, or a formula.

Preview Instantly

See the converted Unicode output appear live.

Copy & Paste

Click Copy and paste your superscript or subscript text into any document, app, or social post.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

A superscript generator converts letters and numbers into their Unicode superscript equivalents — tiny characters that appear raised above the baseline. For example, 2 becomes the superscript 2 character. These work universally wherever Unicode text is supported.
Superscript characters appear ABOVE the text baseline (like exponents). Subscript characters appear BELOW the baseline (like chemical formulas H2O). Our subscript and superscript generator handles both with a simple tab switch.
Most common letters and all digits 0-9 have superscript Unicode versions. A few letters do not have official superscript equivalents — those characters are kept unchanged in the output.
Yes! The generated superscript characters are actual Unicode code points (not HTML tags), so they copy-paste perfectly into Instagram bios, Twitter posts, Discord messages, YouTube comments, and anywhere text is accepted.
Subscript is essential for chemistry formulas, math notation, footnote markers, and physics equations. Our subscript and superscript generator produces clean Unicode subscript text instantly.