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Blog
LinkedIn Formatting Guide · 2026

LinkedIn Symbols & Formatting
Stand Out in a Crowded Feed

Updated May 2026 Headline symbols · Bold text · About section bullets · Post formatting

LinkedIn doesn’t have a built-in formatting toolbar for profiles. But using Unicode symbols and special characters — which copy and paste perfectly into every LinkedIn field — is the difference between a profile that gets skimmed and one that gets read. Here’s everything that works, what doesn’t, and copy-ready examples for every section.

Generate formatted LinkedIn text instantly
The SymbolNow LinkedIn Text Formatter converts any plain text into bold, italic, or styled Unicode text that works in LinkedIn headlines, About sections, and posts — then copies it in one click.
✦ Open LinkedIn Text Formatter — Free

Why LinkedIn Formatting Changes Everything

LinkedIn’s feed is one of the most text-dense environments on the internet. When a recruiter searches for candidates, they’re looking at a list of profiles — all with job titles, all with names, all with photos. The profiles that get clicked are the ones that look different at a glance.

Formatting does two things simultaneously: it makes your profile more scannable (recruiters spend 6–10 seconds on a profile before deciding to read further) and it signals attention to detail — the same quality that makes someone a strong professional candidate.

The key insight: LinkedIn does not support HTML or markdown in profile fields. What looks like bold or italic text in LinkedIn profiles is actually Unicode mathematical characters — characters like 𝗔 (Mathematical Bold A) that look bold because they’re a different character, not because formatting has been applied. This is why they work — they’re just text, and text always copies and pastes correctly.

💡
The one-click method: LinkedIn Text Formatter
Rather than manually finding Unicode characters, use the SymbolNow LinkedIn Text Formatter. Type any text → choose Bold, Italic, or other styles → copy the formatted result → paste directly into LinkedIn. The formatter handles all the Unicode conversion automatically. Free, instant, no account needed.

Bold & Italic Text on LinkedIn — How It Actually Works

LinkedIn profiles support Unicode letter variants that look like bold and italic text. These are the most impactful formatting tools available — they work in headlines, About sections, experience descriptions, and posts.

𝗕𝗼𝗹𝗱
Bold Sans-Serif
Strong, clear, commands attention. Best for headlines, key skills, and section labels in the About section.
click to copy
𝘐𝘵𝘢𝘭𝘪𝘤
Italic Sans-Serif
Softer emphasis. Good for taglines, creative roles, and the human/personality paragraph of an About section.
click to copy
𝘽𝙤𝙡𝙙
Bold Italic
Maximum emphasis. Use very sparingly — for the single most important word or phrase in a section.
click to copy
⚠️
Don’t make your entire profile bold
When everything is bold, nothing is bold. Bold text works because it contrasts with regular text. Making entire paragraphs bold defeats the purpose and looks unprofessional. Use bold for: key skills in your headline, section headers in your About, and 2–3 key achievements in experience descriptions. Use regular text for everything else.

The fastest way to generate formatted text: use the LinkedIn Text Formatter — type your text, click Bold or Italic, copy, paste into LinkedIn. Takes 15 seconds.

Headline Symbols — The Best Separators & Accents

Your LinkedIn headline allows 220 characters. Symbols serve two roles here: as separators between your role, skills, and specialisms, and as visual accents that make your headline stand out in a search results list. Click any symbol to copy it.

Best separator symbols for LinkedIn headlines
Pipe | most used
Bullet • classic
Mid dot · light
Single › clean
Double » bold
Arrow → progress
Triangle ▸
Diamond ◆
Accent symbols to open or close a headline
Star ★
4-point ✦
Lightning ⚡
Rocket 🚀
Idea 💡
Target 🎯
Growth 📈
Key 🔑

Ready-to-copy headline examples with formatting

Tech / Product
🚀 Product Manager | SaaS & FinTech | Launched 3 products with 100K+ users | ex-Stripe, ex-Revolut
click to copy
Marketing
📈 Digital Marketing Lead | SEO · Paid Search · CRO | Grew organic traffic 8× in 18 months | B2B SaaS
click to copy
Design
💡 UX Designer | Figma · Design Systems · User Research | Creating products people love | Open to opportunities
click to copy
Engineering
⚡ Software Engineer | React · Node.js · AWS | Building scalable infrastructure for 10M+ users
click to copy
Sales
🎯 Sales Director | Enterprise SaaS | £12M ARR | Building and scaling high-performance revenue teams
click to copy
Freelance
✦ Freelance Copywriter | SaaS · Tech · Finance | Conversion-focused copy that turns readers into revenue
click to copy
HR / People
🔑 HR Director | Talent Acquisition · Culture · DEI | Scaled teams from 30 to 400+ employees | Series A–D
click to copy
Data / Analytics
📊 Data Scientist | Python · ML · NLP | Turning messy data into clear business decisions | Open to work
click to copy

About Section Formatting — Before & After

The About section is where formatting makes the biggest visible difference. A wall of unbroken text gets skimmed. A structured, symbol-accented About section gets read. Here are direct before/after comparisons — click the green “after” boxes to copy them.

Opening paragraph — the most important formatting decision
✗ Before (skimmed) I am an experienced product manager with a track record of delivering successful products across SaaS and fintech. I have worked with cross-functional teams to bring products from concept to launch and am passionate about building solutions that create real value for users.
✓ After (gets read) I turn product ideas into revenue — and I can prove it with numbers.

In 5 years at Series B–D SaaS companies, I’ve launched 4 products used by 200,000+ people. One thing in common: obsessive focus on the problem before touching the solution.

What I do best:
• Define and own the product roadmap
• Align engineering, design, and commercial teams around a single outcome
• Reduce time-to-market without sacrificing quality
click to copy the full formatted version
Skills and specialisms — unstructured vs structured
✗ Before (wall of text) My skills include SEO, content marketing, paid search, social media management, email marketing, marketing automation, data analytics, Google Analytics, HubSpot, Salesforce, A/B testing, conversion rate optimization, and team management.
✓ After (scannable & searchable) 𝗦𝗽𝗲𝗰𝗶𝗮𝗹𝗶𝘀𝗺𝘀
→ SEO & Content Strategy · → Paid Search & Social (£2M+ spend) · → Marketing Automation · → Analytics & Attribution

𝗜𝗻𝗱𝘂𝘀𝘁𝗿𝗶𝗲𝘀
B2B SaaS · FinTech · E-commerce · Professional Services
click to copy
Generate your formatted LinkedIn text in 15 seconds
Type any text → choose Bold or Italic → copy → paste into LinkedIn. The formatter handles all the Unicode conversion automatically. Free. No sign-up.
✦ Open LinkedIn Text Formatter

The Best Bullet Symbols for LinkedIn About Sections

LinkedIn doesn’t render standard markdown bullet points. Instead, use Unicode symbols that look like bullets when pasted directly into LinkedIn’s text editor. Click any to copy.

Most professional-looking bullets for LinkedIn
Bullet • standard
Arrow → lists
Triangle ▸
Diamond ◆
Check ✓
Star ✦ accent
En dash – clean
Ring ◉ bold
Symbols to use as section headers in the About section
Target 🎯
Work 💼
Growth 📈
Awards 🏆
Tools 🔧
Global 🌍
Ideas 💡
Contact 📩
📋
How to paste formatted text into LinkedIn correctly
Copy your formatted text → click into the LinkedIn About section field → paste normally (Ctrl+V / ⌘+V). LinkedIn preserves Unicode characters and line breaks correctly. If you see formatting issues, try pasting into Notepad first (Windows) or TextEdit in plain text mode (Mac), then copy again from there before pasting into LinkedIn. This strips any hidden formatting from your clipboard that may interfere.

LinkedIn Post Formatting — Get More Reach

LinkedIn posts support the same Unicode formatting as profiles. A well-formatted post gets 30–60% more engagement than unformatted text of the same length — because formatted posts are more scannable, and LinkedIn’s algorithm rewards time-on-post signals (people who read more of your post before scrolling).

Post formatting rules that consistently increase engagement

Hook in the first line. LinkedIn shows 2–3 lines before “see more.” Your opening line must make someone stop scrolling. Don’t start with context — start with the most interesting or provocative thing you’re going to say.

Short paragraphs, single sentences. Posts with single-sentence paragraphs separated by blank lines are easier to read on mobile and perform better across all formats. LinkedIn’s feed is used primarily on mobile — write accordingly.

Use symbols as paragraph openers. Starting a line with → or • creates visual structure without markdown. It signals to the reader that they’re getting a scannable list rather than a dense paragraph — which keeps people reading.

LinkedIn post format — unformatted vs formatted
✗ Unformatted — gets skipped I’ve hired over 200 people in my career and I’ve noticed that the best candidates always do one thing differently in interviews. They answer the question they were asked, not the question they wish they were asked. Most candidates try to steer every question toward their best story. The strongest candidates listen carefully, answer precisely, then add the context that’s most relevant. It’s a small difference that signals something big.
✓ Formatted — gets read and shared I’ve hired 200+ people. The best candidates all do one thing differently.

They answer the question they were asked.

Not the question they wish they were asked.

Most candidates steer every answer toward their best story. The strongest candidates:
→ Listen carefully
→ Answer precisely
→ Add the most relevant context

Small difference. Signals something much bigger.
click to copy the formatted version

What Doesn’t Work on LinkedIn — Common Mistakes

⚠️
Markdown doesn’t render in LinkedIn profiles
**Bold text** and _italic text_ in Markdown do not render in LinkedIn profile fields. They appear as literal asterisks and underscores — which looks unprofessional and confusing. Use Unicode bold/italic characters (via the LinkedIn Text Formatter) instead.
⚠️
Decorative fonts look broken on some devices
Highly decorative Unicode styles (Fraktur 𝔊𝔬𝔱𝔥𝔦𝔠, fullwidth Letters) can look unprofessional on a LinkedIn profile and may render inconsistently across devices. Stick to bold and italic variants for professional profiles — save decorative styles for personal social media.
⚠️
Screen readers read Unicode characters by their Unicode name
Bold Unicode text (𝗛𝗲𝗹𝗹𝗼) is read by screen readers as “mathematical bold H, mathematical bold e…” rather than “Hello.” For maximum accessibility, use Unicode formatting selectively — for visual scannability — rather than for conveying meaning that only appears in bold.

FAQ

Can you use bold text on LinkedIn profiles? Yes — but not through standard formatting. LinkedIn profile fields don’t support HTML or Markdown. Bold-looking text on LinkedIn profiles uses Unicode mathematical bold characters (like 𝗔𝗹𝗲𝘅) that are distinct Unicode characters, not formatted regular letters. Use the LinkedIn Text Formatter to generate them without manual lookup.

Do symbols in LinkedIn headlines affect searchability? Separators like | and • don’t affect keyword search — LinkedIn’s algorithm reads through them. Emoji used in headlines also don’t add to or subtract from keyword relevance. Use them for visual impact and scannability; your actual keywords (role titles, skills, tools, industries) are what drive search visibility.

What is the best separator to use in a LinkedIn headline? The vertical bar | (pipe) is the most used and cleanest-looking separator on LinkedIn headlines — it’s compact, visually clear, and universally readable. The middle dot · is a lighter alternative. Use | between major sections (role | specialism | outcome) and · between items within a section (Python · TensorFlow · PyTorch).

Does LinkedIn have a character limit for formatting? LinkedIn counts Unicode bold/italic characters the same as regular characters — they each count as 1 character toward the headline’s 220-character limit. Emoji count as 1 character in LinkedIn’s counter (though on some systems they count as 2). The About section limit is 2,600 characters regardless of formatting.

Do LinkedIn posts support bold and italic text? LinkedIn posts (as of 2026) do support some native text formatting — bold and italic are available in the post composer. However, Unicode bold/italic characters work across all post types and display consistently, whereas LinkedIn’s native formatting can sometimes be stripped when copied or shared. Using Unicode characters is the more reliable method.

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