Copy and paste Unicode Roman numeral symbols for numbering, titles, and formatted text
Roman symbols are Unicode characters that display Roman numerals, a numeral style commonly used for outlines, chapters, dates, and labeled items in formatted text. This page includes copy-and-paste Roman numeral symbols (for example, Ⅰ Ⅱ Ⅳ ⅿ) and excludes emojis, so everything here remains standard text characters compatible with most apps and documents.
Browse the Roman numeral symbol grid to find the character you need. Select a Roman symbol to add it to the editor, then copy it and paste it into documents, messages, notes, or any app that supports Unicode text.

A Roman symbol is a Unicode text character that represents a numeral written in the Roman numeral system. These characters are typically used to present numbers in a classical or formal format, such as section labels, volume numbers, event editions, and decorative numbering in titles. Common examples include Ⅰ, Ⅱ, Ⅲ, Ⅳ, Ⅴ, and the lowercase thousand symbol ⅿ, depending on the font and context.
These Roman numeral symbols are frequently selected for headings and structured numbering. They are widely supported as Unicode text characters and can usually be pasted into common editors and platforms.
| Symbol | Name |
|---|---|
| Ⅰ | Roman Numeral One |
| Ⅱ | Roman Numeral Two |
| Ⅲ | Roman Numeral Three |
| Ⅳ | Roman Numeral Four |
| Ⅴ | Roman Numeral Five |
| ⅿ | Roman Numeral One Thousand (lowercase form) |
Roman numeral symbols appear in several related Unicode sets. Grouping them by style can help you choose characters that match the formatting of your document or the typographic look you want.
Uppercase Roman numerals are commonly used for chapter numbers, outlines, and formal labels.
Ⅰ Ⅱ Ⅲ Ⅳ Ⅴ Ⅵ Ⅶ Ⅷ Ⅸ Ⅹ
These include larger values often used for volumes, historical numbering, or structured references.
Ⅺ Ⅻ Ⅼ Ⅽ Ⅾ Ⅿ
Lowercase Roman numeral characters are typically used for nested lists or stylistic numbering where lowercase is preferred.
ⅰ ⅱ ⅲ ⅳ ⅴ ⅵ ⅶ ⅷ ⅸ ⅹ
Lowercase forms for larger values are used when consistent lowercase styling is needed across a document.
ⅺ ⅻ ⅼ ⅽ ⅾ ⅿ
Some Roman numeral characters exist as number-form glyphs for typographic consistency and compatibility with certain fonts or layouts.
Ⅰ Ⅴ Ⅹ Ⅼ Ⅽ Ⅾ Ⅿ
These are practical groupings that people often paste as a sequence to create structured lists and headings.
Ⅰ Ⅱ Ⅲ Ⅳ Ⅴ / ⅰ ⅱ ⅲ ⅳ ⅴ
Roman numerals for large values are frequently used in titles (such as editions) and long-running sequences.
Ⅼ Ⅽ Ⅾ Ⅿ / ⅼ ⅽ ⅾ ⅿ
Roman numeral symbols are often used to format information where an alternate numbering style is preferred. The examples below show typical copy-and-paste usage in everyday text.
Ⅰ. Introduction Ⅱ. Method Ⅲ. Results
Chapter Ⅳ: Methods and Materials
Volume Ⅻ
The Ⅹ Anniversary
Requirements: (ⅰ) scope, (ⅱ) timeline, (ⅲ) review
Roman numeral symbols can be pasted into text fields as Unicode characters, which makes them useful for structured profile text and clean-looking labels. Display can vary by font and platform, so it is helpful to preview after pasting to confirm the numerals appear as intended.
Roman numeral symbols are defined in Unicode with specific code points and standardized character names. This helps keep Roman numeral characters consistent across operating systems, browsers, and applications, though the visual style may differ slightly depending on the font in use.
Use this reference table to view Roman numeral symbols alongside their Unicode names. Select a symbol to copy it or to confirm you are using the intended Roman numeral character.