Browse emojis by category, search by name, and copy to your clipboard with one click. Hover to see emoji names.
Emojis add personality and clarity to messages, social posts, and documentation. Our emoji picker includes 200+ commonly used emojis organized into eight categories: Smileys, People, Animals, Food, Travel, Activities, Objects, and Symbols. Use the search box to filter by name, or browse the grid. Click any emoji to copy it to your clipboard, then paste it into Slack, Discord, emails, or any application.
Smileys โ Grinning faces, wink, heart eyes, and more. People โ Hand gestures, hearts, and expressions. Animals โ Dogs, cats, birds, and marine life. Food โ Fruits, vegetables, meals, and drinks. Travel โ Transport, destinations, and luggage. Activities โ Sports, music, and celebrations. Objects โ Tech, office, and everyday items. Symbols โ Check marks, circles, and signs.
Emojis are Unicode code points, but each platformโApple, Google, Microsoft, Samsungโdesigns its own artwork for each code point. That's why the same "grinning face" looks slightly different on iOS versus Android. The meaning is standardized by the Unicode Consortium, but the visual style is up to each vendor.
Absolutely. Emojis are regular Unicode characters, so you can paste them directly into HTML, use their numeric entity (e.g., 🚀 for the rocket), or reference them via CSS content properties. They render without any special font or library, though you can use a library like Twemoji if you want consistent cross-platform rendering.
Emojis are Unicode textโthey add no HTTP requests and negligible file size. Google can index emoji characters and even display them in search snippets, though using them in title tags is generally not recommended. In body content, emojis are safe and can improve readability without any performance cost.