🔍
Text Stylers
Fancy Text Generator
🎨
Stylish Name Generator
s
Small Text Generator
Text Formatters
💼
LinkedIn Formatter
💬
WhatsApp Formatter
🔠
Text Case Converter
Unicode Tools
👁
Invisible Character
🔍
Unicode Inspector
Utilities
🔁
Text Repeater
📄
Word Counter
🌟
Color Palette Generator
📷
Image Resizer New
Productivity
Presentation Timer
🎯
Random Name Picker
Browse Symbols
😀
Browse Emoji
All Tools
📃
Blog
Bio Guide 2026

How to Write the Perfect Instagram & TikTok Bio
The Complete 2026 Guide

Updated April 2026 Character limits · Structure · Symbols · Templates · Do’s & Don’ts

Everything you need to write a bio that actually works — character limits for every platform, what a great bio includes, how to use symbols and fancy text without looking cluttered, ready-to-use templates, and the mistakes that make bios look amateur.

Character Limits — Every Platform

Before you write a single word, know your limits. Nothing is more frustrating than crafting a perfect bio and then discovering it’s 40 characters too long.

📸 Instagram
150 characters for bio text
+ Name field: 30 characters (searchable)
+ Website: 1 link (or Link in Bio service)
+ Category label (for business accounts)
+ Pronouns field (separate, not counted)
🎵 TikTok
80 characters for bio text
+ Name: 30 characters (searchable)
+ Website: 1 link (business accounts only)
Note: Emoji count as 2 characters on TikTok
Note: Most Unicode symbols count as 1
🐦 Twitter / X
160 characters for bio text
+ Name: 50 characters (supports symbols)
+ Location: 30 characters
+ Website + birthday fields
🎮 Discord
190 characters for About Me
+ Display name: separate from username
+ Full Unicode + emoji support
+ No clickable links in About Me
💡
TikTok’s emoji character counting
TikTok counts most emoji as 2 characters, not 1. This matters in an 80-character bio. If you’re using 5 emoji, that’s already 10 characters spent. Unicode text symbols (✦ · ✿ ↳) count as 1 character each — use these instead of emoji when space is tight.

What a Great Bio Actually Contains

The best bios answer four questions fast: Who are you? What do you do? What’s your vibe? What should someone do next? You don’t need all four — but the stronger bios hit at least three.

The anatomy of a high-performing bio
1
Identity line — who you are
Your name (if different from username), pronouns, location, age, or role. What makes you immediately identifiable. Examples: “photographer · she/her · London” or “19 · student · always tired”
2
Content/interest line — what you post or care about
What will someone see if they follow you? What are you about? Examples: “travel · food · honest reviews” or “fashion · thrift finds · sustainable living.” This is what converts profile visitors into followers.
3
Personality line — your vibe or voice
Optional but powerful. A phrase that communicates who you are beyond your content. Examples: “chaotic but make it cute” or “overthinking everything since 2003” or “main character. no notes.”
4
Call to action — what to do next
A link prompt, business contact, or action. Examples: “↓ new video every Friday” or “DM for collabs” or “→ link below.” Critical for business accounts and creators. Optional for personal profiles.

How to Use Symbols & Fancy Text in Bios

Symbols serve two purposes in bios: visual separators (breaking up lines so they’re scannable) and aesthetic accents (setting a mood before anyone reads a word). The key is restraint — symbols should support the text, not overwhelm it.

Separators — the most useful symbol type

A separator between bio items makes a wall of text scannable in under two seconds. The most effective are: · (middle dot), (4-point star), | (pipe), (en dash), and (bullet operator). Use one separator style consistently — mixing three different separators in one bio looks chaotic.

Accent symbols — set the mood instantly

One or two symbols at the start or end of a line can communicate your entire aesthetic before anyone reads the words. ✿ signals cottagecore or soft. ✦ signals clean aesthetic. 🎀 signals coquette. ♛ signals confident/royal. Use these intentionally — they’re shorthand for a whole identity.

Fancy text — small caps and superscript

ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ and ˢᵘᵖᵉʳˢᶜʳⁱᵖᵗ are Unicode characters, not fonts — they work in any bio on any platform. Small caps are great for name or role labels. Superscript is more delicate and works well for secondary information. Use the Small Text Generator to convert any text instantly.

✓ Do this
Use 1 separator style consistently
Use symbols to separate, not fill space
Match symbols to your aesthetic
Use small caps for labels and names
Use arrows (→ ↓) for CTAs and links
Preview your bio on mobile before saving
✗ Avoid this
Mixing 4+ different symbol styles
Symbol rows with no text between them
Full fancy text — hard to read at a glance
Emoji that don’t match your aesthetic
Cramming every interest into 150 chars
Writing your full personality as a list

Ready-to-Use Bio Templates — Click to Copy

These templates are designed to fit within character limits. Replace the bracketed placeholders with your own information. Each template specifies which platform it’s built for.

Clean minimal
📸 Instagram · ~90 chars
✦ [name] · [pronouns] [role / what you do] [interest] · [interest] · [interest] → [link or CTA]
click to copy
Coquette / cute
📸 Instagram · ~80 chars
[name] 🎀 [age] · [pronouns] · [location] [personality line] ↓ new [content] every [day]
click to copy
TikTok short
🎵 TikTok · ~60 chars
[role] · [location] 🌿 [what you post about] → [link]
click to copy
Aesthetic listed
🎮 Discord · ~100 chars
ꜱᴍᴀʟʟ ᴄᴀᴘꜱ [name] ✦ [interest one] ✦ [interest two] ✦ [interest three] ﹒dm status: [open/closed]
click to copy
Business / creator
📸 Instagram · ~120 chars
📍 [location] · [role] [interest] · [interest] · [interest] [personality / brand line] 🔗 [link text]
click to copy
Dark / alt aesthetic
📸 Instagram · ~90 chars
🖤 [name] [pronouns] · [mbti] · [location] [dark/alt personality line] – [link or status]
click to copy

FAQ

How many lines should an Instagram bio be? Three to four lines is the sweet spot. One line reads as minimal (which can be intentional — it signals confidence). Five or more lines often gets truncated on mobile and can look cluttered. Three lines with clear structure is consistently the highest-performing format.

Should I put my name in my bio if it’s already my username? Generally no — it wastes precious characters. Use that space for something that adds information. The exception: if your username is a handle/brand name and your actual name is different, leading with your real name adds personality and searchability.

Do symbols and emoji affect Instagram search? Instagram’s name field (30 characters) is searchable — keywords here matter for discoverability. The bio text is not currently indexed for Instagram search. Emoji and symbols in your bio don’t affect search but do affect first impressions and whether someone clicks Follow.

Can I use line breaks in my Instagram bio? Yes — type your bio in the Notes app on iPhone (or a text editor), press Enter between lines, then copy and paste it into your Instagram bio. Instagram preserves line breaks entered this way. Typing directly in the Instagram bio field may not register line breaks on all devices.

Does TikTok bio affect views? Your bio doesn’t directly affect the For You Page algorithm — TikTok distributes content based on video signals, not profile completeness. But a clear, compelling bio converts profile visitors into followers, which does indirectly support your reach over time.

What’s the best bio for getting followers? Clarity beats cleverness. The bio that performs best is one that immediately answers “what will I get if I follow this account?” — in plain language, specific and honest. A niche-specific bio (“travel budget guides for solo women”) outperforms a vague one (“living my best life”) every time.

Copied!