Superscript Characters ⁿ Copy & Paste
Superscript digits, letters, and operators. Click to copy instantly.
All Superscript Characters
Click any character to copy instantly
Superscript Packs
Organized collections
Superscript Digits
10 items
Superscript Letters
25 items
Superscript Operators
6 items
Superscript characters are raised text symbols that appear smaller and above the normal text baseline. They play a critical role in mathematics, science, engineering, and everyday writing. From expressing exponents like x² and powers of ten such as 10⁹ to writing chemical ions like Fe³⁺ and Ca²⁺, superscript characters provide a compact and universally understood notation that conveys precise meaning without ambiguity.
Our collection covers three essential groups of superscript characters. First, you will find the complete set of superscript digits from ⁰ through ⁹, which are indispensable for writing mathematical exponents, polynomial expressions, and scientific notation. Second, we offer superscript letters including ᵃ ᵇ ᶜ ᵈ ᵉ ᶠ ᵍ and many more, which are widely used in phonetic transcription, linguistic notation, ordinal indicators in languages like Spanish and French, and trademark or service mark annotations. Third, the superscript operators ⁺ ⁻ ⁼ ⁽ ⁾ are essential for writing ionic charges in chemistry, grouping expressions in compact mathematical notation, and annotating positive or negative values in technical documents.
Unlike formatting-based superscripts that depend on the application you are using, these are genuine Unicode characters. That means they work everywhere plain text is accepted, including social media posts, messaging apps, email subject lines, usernames, spreadsheets, and code comments. Simply click any character on this page to copy it to your clipboard, then paste it wherever you need raised text that travels with your content across any platform or device.
How to Use Superscript Characters
Click
Click any superscript character to copy
Paste
Ctrl+V (Win) or Cmd+V (Mac)
Use
In math, science, footnotes, or any text
Frequently Asked Questions
The easiest way is to copy superscript digits from this page: ⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹. In Word, select text and press Ctrl+Shift+= or use Format > Superscript. In LaTeX, use the caret: x^{2}.
Unicode superscripts (like ²) are actual characters that remain raised in any context, including plain text fields and URLs. Formatted superscripts rely on rich-text formatting and may lose their position when pasted into plain text environments.
Yes! Superscript digits are perfect for writing exponents in plain text. For example, x² means x squared, 10⁶ means one million, and aⁿ represents a raised to the nth power.
In chemistry, superscripts denote ionic charges such as Na⁺ (sodium ion), Cl⁻ (chloride ion), Fe²⁺ (ferrous iron), and Fe³⁺ (ferric iron). They are also used in isotope notation like ²³⁵U.
Yes! Unicode superscript characters work on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, Discord, Reddit, and virtually every platform that accepts text input. They are real characters, not formatting.
Absolutely. Superscript numbers are commonly used as footnote markers in plain text. For example, placing ¹ or ² after a statement to reference a footnote at the bottom of the text.
Unicode includes superscript forms for most Latin letters, though a few (like q) do not have an official superscript codepoint. The available letters cover the vast majority of common use cases.
Superscript characters are Unicode glyphs rendered by the device font. Slight visual differences between platforms are normal. For consistent appearance in print documents, use a font like Cambria or STIX Two Math.