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Flip your text upside down instantly. Copy & paste anywhere.

Free Upside Down Text Generator

Type anything and this tool flips it upside down using special Unicode characters that resemble rotated letters. The result reads top-to-bottom flipped — perfect for grabbing attention in a bio, confusing your friends, or adding a quirky touch to a username. Just copy and paste.

How Does Flipping Text Work?

Unicode contains characters that happen to look like upside-down versions of normal letters. The tool swaps each letter for its flipped lookalike and reverses the order, so when read normally it appears rotated 180 degrees. It's real text, so it pastes anywhere.

Where It Works

Flipped text works in Instagram bios, Discord names, TikTok captions, text messages, and most other apps. Some characters have no perfect upside-down match, so a few symbols may stay as-is.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can people read upside down text?

Yes — it's normal characters arranged to look flipped, so anyone can read it by tilting their screen or their head. It reads cleanly once you rotate the phone, which is part of the fun.

Why do a few letters look wrong or stay normal?

Unicode doesn't have a perfect upside-down match for every single character, so the tool uses the closest available lookalike. A handful of symbols have no good flipped version and are left as they are.

Does flipped text work in usernames?

In most apps, yes. Some platforms restrict certain characters in usernames, so if a name is rejected, try removing symbols and keeping just flipped letters.

Will it post correctly on Instagram and TikTok?

Generally yes, since the output is standard Unicode. As always, paste it into the app and preview before publishing, because rendering can vary slightly between devices.

Is it free?

Yes, totally free with no sign-up.

Fun Ways to Use Flipped Text

A Little History

Flipping text became popular in the early days of social media and forums as a quick way to look clever or quirky without any special software. Before Unicode lookalikes were widely supported, people had to fake the effect with images. Today the characters are built into the text standard, so the flip travels anywhere plain text goes.