Instagram and most apps strip normal bold formatting from captions and bios. This tool sidesteps that: it swaps your letters for bold Unicode characters that survive copy-paste everywhere — 𝗹𝗶𝗸𝗲 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝘀.
How to use
- Type your text in the box
- Pick a bold style (serif, sans or italic-bold)
- Tap Copy and paste it into your bio or post
There are three bold looks worth knowing. Serif bold (𝐀𝐚) reads classic and dense — good for a name. Sans bold (𝗔𝗮) is cleaner and the safest across apps. Bold italic (𝘼𝙖) adds a slant for a softer, editorial feel.
A practical tip from testing dozens of bios: don't bold everything. One bolded line at the top of a profile pulls the eye; a fully-bold bio reads as noise and some apps truncate it oddly.
Where bold actually sticks: Instagram bio and captions, TikTok bio, Discord messages and 'About me', Twitter/X tweets, WhatsApp, Telegram channel descriptions, and most comment fields. Where it gets normalised: the legal-name field on Facebook, some form inputs, and email subject lines (depends on the client). When in doubt, paste a test and check on a phone, not just desktop.
Why this works at all: these characters live in Unicode's Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block. They were added for equations, which is why there's a quirk — Latin letters and digits have bold forms, but most other scripts (including Cyrillic) don't. So bold reliably styles English; for Russian text you'll want decorative or small-caps styles instead, which this site shows automatically when bold can't change your input.
Quick use-cases people copy most: a bold name as the first bio line, a bold call-to-action like 𝗦𝗛𝗢𝗣 𝗡𝗢𝗪, bold section labels in a long caption, and bold keywords in a comment to make a point stand out. Pair bold with a normal-weight line beneath it and the contrast does the heavy lifting.
FAQ
- Why does bold disappear when I paste it?
- Some platforms re-render pasted text. Unicode bold survives in Instagram, TikTok, Twitter/X and Discord; a few apps (parts of Facebook) normalise it. If one strips it, try the Sans Bold variant.
- Is this an actual font?
- No. There are no installable fonts in a bio. These are real Unicode characters that look bold, so they work without anyone installing anything.
- Will screen readers read bold Unicode?
- Often poorly — use it for short accents (a name, a heading), not whole paragraphs.