⚛️ Write Text in Subscript
Type or paste your text below and convert it to subscript characters instantly.
What is Subscript Text?
Subscript text appears slightly below the normal line of type and is smaller than the surrounding text. It’s commonly used in chemistry (H₂O, CO₂), mathematics (x₁, y₂), and technical writing. This tool instantly turns regular characters into their Unicode subscript equivalents, so you can paste them anywhere—including your Blogger posts, social media, or documents.
Unicode Subscript Characters
Unlike rich-text formatting (like Ctrl+=), our generator uses special Unicode characters that are built into almost every modern font. This means your subscript text stays intact even when you copy it into plain-text editors, email subjects, or code. We map digits (₀₁₂₃₄₅₆₇₈₉), lowercase letters (ₐₑₕᵢⱼₖₗₘₙₒₚᵣₛₜᵤᵥₓ), and a few symbols (+₋₌₍₎) for maximum versatility.
How to Use This Subscript Generator
Follow three simple steps:
- Enter your text – type or paste the normal string in the top box.
- Click “Convert to Subscript” – the tool instantly replaces supported characters with their subscript forms.
- Copy and paste – hit the copy button and insert the result into your blog post, comment, or document. The formatting never breaks!
Why Bloggers Love This Tool
Whether you’re writing a science tutorial, a math guide, or want to add a unique style to your blog, subscript text makes your content look expert and polished. Since it’s pure Unicode, you don’t need to worry about compatibility problems. It works on all devices and browsers without any plugins or special fonts.
Tips for Using Subscript Text in Your Posts
- Use subscript for chemical formulas like C₆H₁₂O₆ to grab attention.
- Add footnotes or indices like a₁, b₂ in statistical posts.
- Combine with superscript for extra creative expressions! (superscript tool available separately.)
- Remember that not every character has a Unicode subscript version – uppercase letters and most punctuation will stay as normal text.
Bookmark this page and return whenever you need to write in subscript. It’s free, fast, and always online.