Upside Down Text Generator

Flip your text upside down, so it reads uʍop ǝpısdn, and copy it to paste into posts, bios and messages. A fun, attention-grabbing trick built from flipped look-alike characters. Free, instant, and works anywhere.

  • Copies and pastes anywhere
  • 100% free
  • No sign-up, no app
  • Works on phone and desktop
  • Unlimited text, no limits
Read the guide: How to Flip Text Upside Down
Your text

Tap any row to copy it. These are Unicode characters, so they paste into most apps — though a few places (and some older devices) may not show every style.

How to use it

  1. 1

    Type your text

    Type or paste your words into the box. The styled versions update as you type.

  2. 2

    Pick a style

    Browse the styled results and find the look you want.

  3. 3

    Tap to copy

    Tap the style to copy it, then paste it anywhere: a bio, caption, username or message.

When it comes in handy

Fun posts and replies

Drop an upside-down comment or caption that makes people tilt their phone.

Quirky bios

Set a profile apart with a line that reads the wrong way up.

Playful messages

Send a flipped message as a joke or a small puzzle for a friend.

Instant & 100% private — nothing is uploaded

The styling happens right here in your browser. Your text is never sent to a server, so there is no sign-up, no email wall, and no length cap from us. Load the page once and it keeps working even if you go offline.

Frequently asked questions

How does upside-down text work?
Each letter is swapped for a character that looks like its flipped version, and the whole string is reversed so it reads correctly when turned around. Because those are real characters, the result copies and pastes like normal text.
Why do a few characters not flip?
Some letters and symbols have no good upside-down look-alike in Unicode, so they are left as they are. The phrase still reads as flipped overall, with just the odd character sitting the right way up.
Are these real fonts, and will they work everywhere?
They are not font files. Each style is made of real Unicode characters that look like a styled font, which is why you can copy them and paste them straight into a bio, post or message without installing anything. Because they are normal characters, they show up in most apps and on most devices. A few places that strip formatting, and some older phones, may show plain boxes for the rarer styles, so it is worth pasting a sample where you plan to use it.