Invisible Character – Free Online Utility

Copy and paste invisible characters and blank spaces.

U+200B

Zero Width Space

An invisible space used to allow line breaks in long words without being visible.

U+200C

Zero Width Non-Joiner

Used in typography to prevent two characters from being joined together.

U+200D

Zero Width Joiner

Used to join two characters into a single glyph (common in emojis).

U+00A0

Non-Breaking Space

A space that prevents an automatic line break at its position.

U+2063

Invisible Separator

Used in mathematical scripts to separate symbols without adding space.

U+3164

Blank Character

Also known as Hangul Filler, it appears as a completely empty space in most apps.

How to use invisible characters?

Simply click the **"Copy Character"** button for the character you need. It will be added to your clipboard, and you can paste it anywhere—Facebook, Instagram, Discord, Fortnite, or even in your code.

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Copy and Paste Invisible Text

Sometimes you need to send a message that appears empty, or set a username that is completely invisible. Since standard spaces are often trimmed or not allowed as usernames, you need a specialized invisible character. Our tool provides a collection of Unicode characters that look like spaces but are treated differently by applications.

Zero Width Space (ZWSP)

The Zero Width Space is a non-printing character used in computerized typesetting to indicate word boundaries to text-processing systems when using scripts that do not use explicit spaces. It is also commonly used to "break" long strings of text that would otherwise overflow a container.

Invisible Characters for Gaming

Many gamers use invisible characters to have a blank name in games like **Free Fire**, **PUBG Mobile**, or **Fortnite**. Using characters like the Hangul Filler (U+3164) often bypasses the restriction that prevents a username from being just a standard space.

Frequently Asked Questions

Invisible characters are used for various purposes, including creating "empty" nicknames in games, sending blank messages on chat apps, or forcing line breaks in web design without adding visual clutter.
Yes, these characters have no visual glyph in standard fonts. They occupy space or provide logic (like preventing line breaks) but do not appear as a mark on the screen.
Most gaming and chat platforms support these characters, though some have started filtering them to prevent users from having completely empty names.

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