On X, profile names and bios use a single plain font, so a distinctive look needs Unicode styling.
Twitter Fonts shows your text in compact Unicode font styles that suit a profile name or bio on X without crowding it.
How to use Twitter Fonts
- Type or paste your text to get profile-safe X or Twitter fonts.
- Favour compact, readable styles for a profile.
- Copy a font and paste it into your X name or bio.
Use cases
- Styling a compact profile name on X.
- Adding a readable font to a short bio.
- Keeping styled text tidy within limits.
Good to know
Twitter Fonts favours compact Unicode styles suited to X profiles. Not every client renders every style, and some characters count as more than one, so keep important text in widely supported styles. Only the first 2,000 characters are styled so the page stays responsive; a note appears when that limit is reached.
Frequently asked questions
Are these fonts safe for an X profile?
Compact, common styles render most reliably; some clients may show plain letters for less-supported styles.
Why keep profile fonts compact?
Profile names and bios are short, so compact, readable styles look tidier and survive across clients better.
Do these affect the character count?
Some Unicode characters count as several, so styled text can use the limit faster than plain text.
Is my text private when I use Twitter Fonts?
Yes. Twitter Fonts works locally in your browser, so your text never leaves your device.
This tool is independent and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by X or Twitter. Styled text usually works where Unicode text is accepted, but reach and placement are never guaranteed.