Copy and paste royal-style Unicode letters for names, titles, bios, and decorative text
Royal letters are decorative Unicode letterforms often chosen to make text look regal, formal, or ceremonial in places like names, headings, and short phrases. This page includes copy-and-paste royal letter symbols in popular Unicode styles (such as script and fraktur) and excludes emojis; for example, you might use 𝓐 𝓑 𝓒 𝔄 in a title to add a refined look.
Browse the royal letters grid to find the exact style you want. Select a letter to place it into the editor, then copy and paste your royal text into profiles, documents, design tools, and messages.

Royal letters are stylized Unicode characters that represent Latin letters (A–Z and a–z) in decorative forms commonly associated with formal or classic typography. They are typically used to add a refined appearance to short text such as names, headings, initials, and brand labels. Because they are standard Unicode characters, royal letters can usually be copied and pasted like normal text, though appearance can vary by font and platform.
These royal letter styles are among the most commonly selected for a regal look in titles, initials, and decorative text.
| Symbol | Name |
|---|---|
| 𝓐 | Script Capital A (often used for elegant titles) |
| 𝓑 | Script Capital B (commonly used for names and headings) |
| 𝓒 | Script Capital C (often used for decorative initials) |
| 𝔄 | Fraktur Capital A (typically used for classic, formal styling) |
| 𝔅 | Fraktur Capital B (commonly used for vintage-style labels) |
| 𝔇 | Fraktur Capital D (often used for ornamental headings) |
Royal letters are available in multiple Unicode letter styles. Grouping them by style helps you choose a consistent look across a word, name, or short phrase.
Script letters are often used to create a formal, handwritten look suitable for signatures, titles, and elegant branding.
𝓐 𝓑 𝓒 𝓓 𝓔 𝓕 𝓖
Bold script letters add more visual weight while keeping a decorative calligraphic style for headings and highlighted words.
𝓐 𝓑 𝓒 𝓓 𝓔 𝓕 𝓖
Fraktur letters are typically used for a historic or ceremonial look and are common in classic-style titles and decorative text.
𝔄 𝔅 𝔇 𝔈 𝔉 𝔊 𝔍
Bold fraktur letters are often chosen for emphasis while keeping a traditional blackletter appearance.
𝕬 𝕭 𝕯 𝕰 𝕱 𝕲 𝕵
Double-struck letters can look formal and structured, and are sometimes used to make initials and abbreviations stand out in short text.
𝔸 𝔹 ℂ 𝔻 𝔼 𝔽 𝔾
Some Unicode letter variants are used mainly for ornamental capital styling in headings and short labels where readability remains important.
𝐀 𝐁 𝐂 𝐃 𝐄 𝐅 𝐆
Lowercase royal-style letters help keep a consistent look when writing full names or short phrases in a matching style.
𝓪 𝓫 𝓬 𝓭 𝓮 𝓯 𝓰
Royal letters are most effective in short text where the decorative style stays readable. Here are practical examples of how they are commonly used.
𝓐𝓵𝓮𝔁
𝓒𝓻𝓮𝓪𝓽𝓸𝓻 • 𝓔𝓭𝓲𝓽𝓸𝓻
𝔄𝔅𝔒𝔘𝔗 𝔐𝔈
𝓐𝓑
𝔓𝔯𝔢𝔪𝔦𝔲𝔪
Royal letters are often used to style short text in online profiles where a distinctive, formal look is desired. Since these are Unicode characters, you can usually paste them into many apps and websites that accept text input. Display can depend on the fonts supported by each platform, so it can help to test the final result after pasting.
Royal letters are Unicode characters that map to stylized variants of standard Latin letters. Unicode assigns each character a code point and name (for example, styles such as mathematical script or fraktur), which helps keep text copyable across systems. However, exact rendering can vary depending on device fonts and platform support, so some letter styles may appear differently or fall back to a default look in certain apps.
Use this list to reference royal-style letters and their Unicode style names (where available). Select any character to copy it or to check the style it belongs to.