Cursive Text Generator

Transform your text into beautiful 𝒸𝓊𝓇𝓈𝒾𝓋ℯ and 𝓈𝓬𝓻𝓲𝓹𝓽 fonts. Copy and paste anywhere.

Compatibility

This tool uses Unicode script-style characters to create copyable cursive text. The UI can be localized, but the conversion mainly works for Latin letters, while numbers and most non-Latin scripts remain unchanged.

  • Best for English names, signature-style phrases, bios, and short titles.
  • Chinese and most non-Latin characters usually stay unchanged.
  • Best when you want decorative text you can still copy and paste.

Popular Platforms

Instagram BioTikTok ProfileDiscord NameTelegramPinterestX / Twitter

Best Use Cases

Names & signatures

Great for names, short taglines, and profile signatures.

Social media styling

Useful for bios, captions, and decorative headings.

Aesthetic phrases

Best for short English quotes and mood text.

How to Use

1

Type Your Text

Enter any text you want to convert to cursive style.

2

Choose Style

Select from multiple cursive and script font styles.

3

Copy & Paste

Click Copy and paste the cursive text into social media, bios, messages, or documents.

Popular Uses

Instagram Bio

Make your bio stand out with cursive text

Twitter/X Posts

Add style to your tweets and replies

Facebook Posts

Create eye-catching social media content

Discord Username

Set a unique cursive display name

Email Signatures

Add a touch of elegance to emails

Creative Projects

Use in design mockups and presentations

FAQ

Is this really a different font?

It uses special Unicode characters that look like cursive/script text. These are actual characters, not images, so they work everywhere Unicode is supported.

Why don't some characters convert?

Unicode only provides cursive variants for Latin letters (A-Z, a-z). Numbers, punctuation, and non-Latin characters remain unchanged.

Is it free?

Yes, completely free with no limits. No sign-up required.

Why do numbers or Chinese characters not turn cursive?

Unicode only includes complete cursive/script variants for parts of the Latin alphabet. Numbers, Chinese text, and many other characters usually remain unchanged.

What kind of content is this best for?

It works best for English names, short phrases, profile bios, and decorative text, not long non-Latin paragraphs.

The page is multilingual. Why is English still recommended?

The UI language is localized for readability, but the actual Unicode cursive variants mainly exist for Latin letters.