Wingdings Translator
Free Wingdings translator — convert any text into Wingdings symbols using real Unicode characters. No font install needed. Copy and paste anywhere.
Letters (A–Z) and digits (0–9) are translated using real Unicode symbols — spaces and punctuation are kept as-is.
About Wingdings Translator
The Wingdings Translator converts ordinary text into the classic Microsoft Wingdings symbol set — the dingbat font that’s been shipping with Windows since 1990, where every letter key produces a picture instead of a character.
Rather than requiring the actual Wingdings font (which most non-Windows devices don’t have installed), this tool maps each letter and digit to its equivalent standard Unicode symbol — the same hands, faces, zodiac signs, and shapes Wingdings uses, reproduced with characters that render correctly everywhere. Type a name or a message and watch it turn into a string of dingbats you can copy and paste anywhere Unicode is supported.
Uppercase letters map to the more recognisable Wingdings symbols — the victory hand, the smiley face, the skull and crossbones — while lowercase letters map to zodiac signs and simple geometric shapes, exactly as in the original font. Digits map to the classic file and folder icons.
The reference grid below shows every mapped character at a glance. Everything runs in your browser — no server calls, no signup, no watermark.
Frequently asked questions
Wingdings is a dingbat font shipped with Windows since 1990, where every letter and number key produces a picture symbol instead of a character — hands, faces, shapes, and icons rather than the letter itself.
No. This tool doesn't use the actual Wingdings font — it maps each letter to the equivalent standard Unicode symbol (like ✌ for A or ☺ for J), so the translated text displays correctly on any device or browser without any font install.
Yes. Since the output is standard Unicode, it pastes correctly into Discord, Twitter/X, Notes, iMessage, WhatsApp, and anywhere else Unicode symbols are supported.
This tool covers letters A–Z and digits 0–9, which is the range most people actually use. Spaces and punctuation are left as-is rather than substituted.