Superscript Text Overview
Transform text into ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ raised characters for exponents, footnotes, ordinals, and scientific notation. Perfect for math expressions (x²), citations (¹²³), ordinals (1ˢᵗ), and trademark symbols.
The superscript text generator transforms text into raised Unicode characters (ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ) that sit above the baseline—perfect for exponents, footnotes, ordinals, and scientific notation. Copy and paste these elevated characters into math expressions like x², footnote markers like ¹²³, ordinal endings like 1ˢᵗ 2ⁿᵈ 3ʳᵈ, and anywhere you need text positioned above the normal line.
Raised Text for Math and References with the Superscript Text Generator
Superscript positions characters above the baseline at a smaller size—a typographic convention used for exponents in mathematics, footnote references in academic writing, ordinal indicators in numbered lists, and trademark/registered symbols in branding and legal documents.
This tool uses characters from several Unicode blocks including Superscripts and Subscripts (U+2070–U+209F) and Modifier Letters. Digits map to dedicated superscript forms (⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹), while letters use phonetic modifier characters (ᵃᵇᶜᵈᵉ...) that create the elevated appearance.
Because these are real Unicode characters—not HTML formatting or images—they work in plain-text environments like social media bios, messaging apps, and anywhere the <sup> tag isn't available. The raised position travels with your text across all platforms without requiring special rendering.
Popular Uses for Superscript Characters
- Mathematical exponents: Write "x² + y²" or "E = mc²" for equations in plain text fields where mathematical notation is needed
- Scientific notation: Express "10⁶" (million) or "2⁻³" for powers of ten and negative exponents in research and technical documents
- Footnote references: Mark citations as "according to research¹" or "see note²³" in documents and academic writing
- Ordinal indicators: Style "1ˢᵗ place", "2ⁿᵈ edition", "3ʳᵈ quarter" for rankings and sequences in lists
- Chemical isotopes: Write "¹⁴C" (carbon-14) or "²³⁵U" (uranium-235) for nuclear chemistry and isotope notation
- Trademark symbols: Create "Brand™" effects or "Patent pending" markers for intellectual property references
- Phonetic notation: Mark aspiration or other linguistic features in IPA transcriptions and language studies
- Social media flair: Style usernames like "ᵗⁱⁿʸ ᵗᵉˣᵗ" for playful, elevated aesthetics in bios and profiles
- Temperature scales: Write "98.6° F" or "37° C" for degree symbols in weather and scientific contexts
- Dated references: Mark historical notes as "circa 1890ˢ" or "20ᵗʰ century" for temporal indicators
Superscript Text Examples Ready to Copy
- Math: "x2" → "x²" | "y3" → "y³" | "a2 + b2 = c2" → "a² + b² = c²" | "10 to 6" → "10⁶"
- Footnotes: "1" → "¹" | "23" → "²³" | "note 5" → "note ⁵" | "reference 10" → "reference ¹⁰"
- Ordinals: "1st" → "1ˢᵗ" | "2nd" → "2ⁿᵈ" | "3rd" → "3ʳᵈ" | "4th" → "4ᵗʰ" | "21st" → "21ˢᵗ"
- Science: "10 to the 6" → "10⁶" | "2 to the -3" → "2⁻³" | "E equals mc2" → "E = mc²"
- Text: "tiny" → "ᵗⁱⁿʸ" | "super" → "ˢᵘᵖᵉʳ" | "small" → "ˢᵐᵃˡˡ"
How to Create Superscript Text
Step 1 - Type: Enter the exponent, footnote number, ordinal ending, or text you want to raise. The superscript text generator works with digits 0-9 and letters a-z for complete coverage.
Step 2 - Elevate: The tool maps each character to its superscript Unicode form, so "2" becomes "²" and "st" becomes "ˢᵗ" positioned above the baseline instantly.
Step 3 - Copy: Click the copy button to grab your raised text—ready for mathematical and decorative use across platforms.
Step 4 - Paste: Drop it into social media, documents, emails, or any text field. The superscript position renders natively without HTML or special formatting requirements.
Superscript Text Character Coverage and Tips
Unicode superscript support varies by character type, which is important to understand for effective use:
- Digits ⁰-⁹: Full coverage—all ten digits have dedicated superscript forms, perfect for exponents and footnotes in math and science
- Lowercase a-z: Most letters have superscript modifier forms (ᵃᵇᶜᵈᵉᶠᵍʰⁱʲᵏˡᵐⁿᵒᵖʳˢᵗᵘᵛʷˣʸᶻ) for linguistic and decorative use
- Uppercase A-Z: No dedicated uppercase superscripts in Unicode—the generator maps to lowercase forms automatically
- Best used for short sequences: exponents, footnotes, ordinal endings—not full sentences where readability suffers
- Some letters may appear slightly different heights depending on the font and platform rendering
- Screen readers typically announce these as modifier letters, not "superscript" which may affect accessibility
- Works excellently for mathematical notation where traditional superscript formatting isn't available
- The elevated position is part of the character itself, not applied formatting that could be lost
More Notation and Specialized Text Styles
For related specialized typography, try Subscript for lowered H₂O text, Small Capitals for ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ reduced-height uppercase, Tiny Text for ᵗⁱⁿʸ miniaturized characters, Monospace for 𝚌𝚘𝚍𝚎 style notation, or Double Struck for 𝕞𝕒𝕥𝕙 mathematical symbols.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Superscript Text Generator?
It raises characters above the baseline at smaller size. 'x2' becomes 'x²', '1st' becomes '1ˢᵗ'. It's standard notation for exponents, footnotes, ordinals, and scientific expressions—now available in plain text.
Does superscript work on Instagram and Twitter?
Yes! Because these are Unicode characters, you can paste superscript directly into social media, bios, messages, and any platform. The raised position travels with the text without needing HTML.
Can I write math equations with superscript?
Absolutely! Write 'E = mc²', 'x² + y² = z²', or '10⁶' directly in plain text. Digits 0-9 all have superscript forms (⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹), making mathematical notation easy.
How do I create ordinals like 1st, 2nd, 3rd?
Type the number normally, then add superscript letters: '1' + 'ˢᵗ' = '1ˢᵗ', '2' + 'ⁿᵈ' = '2ⁿᵈ', '3' + 'ʳᵈ' = '3ʳᵈ'. The generator converts 'st', 'nd', 'rd', 'th' to raised forms.
Why don't uppercase letters have superscripts?
Unicode includes superscript digits and lowercase modifier letters, but no dedicated uppercase superscripts. The generator maps uppercase input to lowercase superscript forms (A→ᵃ). This is a Unicode standard limitation.
What's the difference between superscript and subscript?
Superscript raises text above baseline (x²)—used for exponents and footnotes. Subscript lowers text below baseline (H₂O)—used for chemical formulas and indices. Use superscript for powers, subscript for molecular notation.