Circle Symbols ● ○ ◎ Copy & Paste
All circle and dot symbols in every size and style. Pure text—works everywhere. Click to copy instantly.
Circle & Dot Symbols
Click any symbol to copy
Quick Copy Packs
Copy a curated set in one click
All Circle Symbols
12 items
Favorites
6 items
Circle symbols are the most fundamental geometric characters in Unicode—used as bullet points, decorative elements, status indicators, and design components in virtually every digital context. From the solid bullet • to large circles ● ○, target symbols ◎, and fisheye ◉, these shapes are indispensable.
Circles and dots appear everywhere in digital communication: as bullet points in documents (•), as radio button indicators (○ ●), as decorative separators in bios (·), as record buttons (⏺), and as building blocks for text art and visual design. They are the most commonly used geometric symbols across all platforms.
Our circle collection includes filled circles (● • ◉), outlined circles (○ ◎ ◯), dots of various sizes (· • ●), special circle variants, and related round characters. Every symbol copies with one click and works on all devices and platforms.
Pro tip: circles and dots are the most universally compatible symbols across all platforms and fonts. They render reliably even on older devices and in email clients where more exotic Unicode characters might fail, making them a safe choice for any context.
Frequently Asked Questions
On Windows, use Alt+7 for • or Alt+0183 for · on the numpad. On Mac, press Option+8 for •. The easiest method is to copy from our page with one click.
The • (bullet) is medium-sized, · (middle dot) is small, and ● (black circle) is large. They are all filled circles at different sizes, used for different purposes: • for lists, · for separators, ● for emphasis.
The standard bullet • is the most common choice. For minimal aesthetics, use · (middle dot). For emphasis, use ● (black circle). For open lists, use ○ (white circle) or ◦ (white bullet).
Yes! The middle dot · is extremely popular as a bio separator: "Name · City · Hobby". Circles and dots create clean, minimal spacing between bio elements and work on all platforms.
Yes! Unicode includes half-filled circles: ◐ (left half black), ◑ (right half black), ◒ (lower half black), and ◓ (upper half black). These are useful for progress indicators and creative designs.
Circles serve many design functions: bullet points for lists, radio buttons for selection, loading indicators, decorative elements in bios, target/bullseye symbols, and building blocks for text art patterns.