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Infinity Symbol ∞ Copy & Paste

All infinity and forever symbols. Pure text—works everywhere. Click to copy instantly.

Infinity Symbols

Click any symbol to copy

Related Math Symbols

Often used alongside infinity

Infinity Symbol Packs

Ready-to-copy collections

Bio & Username

5 items

±πΣ

Math Essentials

7 items

∞·∞·∞♾·♾·♾⟲∞⟳☊∞☋

Decorative

4 items

The infinity symbol ∞ (also called lemniscate) represents endlessness, eternity, and limitless possibilities. It's one of the most searched mathematical symbols on the internet—and one of the most popular choices for social media bios, tattoo designs, and aesthetic usernames.

Originally introduced by mathematician John Wallis in 1655, the ∞ symbol has transcended mathematics to become a universal icon of forever, love without end, and infinite potential. Our collection includes the classic mathematical infinity (∞), the permanent paper symbol (♾), and decorative variations perfect for creative designs.

Every symbol on this page is pure Unicode text—not an image or emoji. That means it copies cleanly, displays identically on all devices, and works in any text field: Instagram bios, Twitter/X profiles, Discord usernames, WhatsApp messages, email signatures, and more.

Our infinity collection includes mathematical, decorative, and aesthetic variants. Bookmark this page for instant access—whether you need the symbol for a math equation, a meaningful tattoo reference, an Instagram bio, or a love message that says forever.

How this Infinity Symbol Copy and Paste collection is organised

This Infinity Symbol Copy and Paste collection gathers every Unicode character that belongs in the category plus the close relatives people tend to search for in the same sitting. The grid above is grouped so the most-copied items sit at the top — for Infinity Symbol Copy and Paste that means the canonical Unicode characters first, close stylistic relatives second, and the longer tail of rarer variants at the bottom. Click any tile and the character goes straight to your clipboard; a small toast at the bottom-right confirms the copy so you can keep browsing.

What makes this collection different from a generic "copy-paste site" is that every character here is real Unicode text, not an image. That means the character survives every redraw: if you paste it into Instagram, Discord, TikTok, a Word document, a Google Doc, a Figma file or a Markdown README, the recipient's device renders it with its own font, at the size of the surrounding text, with correct accessibility semantics for screen readers. No installation, no app permission, and nothing leaves your browser.

How to Type the Infinity Symbol

1

Copy Here

Click any ∞ symbol above to copy instantly

2

Keyboard Shortcut

Windows: Alt+236 on numpad. Mac: Option+5

3

Paste Anywhere

Use Ctrl+V (Win) or Cmd+V (Mac) in any app

Frequently Asked Questions

On Windows: Hold Alt and type 236 on the numeric keypad (not top row numbers). On Mac: Press Option+5. On mobile: Use the symbol keyboard or simply copy ∞ from this page.

The infinity symbol ∞ is Unicode U+221E (INFINITY). It has been part of Unicode since version 1.1 (1993). The emoji version ♾ is U+267E (PERMANENT PAPER SIGN).

In mathematics, ∞ represents a quantity without bound or end. In popular culture, it symbolizes forever, eternal love, limitless possibilities, and endlessness. It's widely used in jewelry, tattoos, and social media to express "forever" concepts.

Yes! ∞ is a standard Unicode text character supported since 1993. It displays identically on iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, Linux—everywhere that supports basic Unicode text.

∞ (U+221E) is the mathematical infinity symbol—plain text, monochrome, universal. ♾ (U+267E) is the "permanent paper" sign that some platforms render as a colorful emoji. For consistent display, use ∞.

Absolutely! ∞ works perfectly in Instagram bios, usernames, and captions. It's a text character, so it displays the same for all your followers regardless of their device.

English mathematician John Wallis introduced the ∞ symbol in 1655 in his work "De Sectionibus Conicis." The shape is called a lemniscate, from the Latin "lemniscatus" meaning "decorated with ribbons."

Use ∞ or ∞ in HTML. In CSS: content: "\221E". In JavaScript/JSON: "\u221E". All produce the ∞ character.

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