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Twitter Bio Generator

Describe what you do in one sentence. Get back five distinct bios that fit under the 160-character X limit and skip the LinkedIn-speak. Each draft takes a different angle — builder, specialist, credential, personality, minimalist — so you can pick the one that sounds most like you. Free, no sign-up.

Your bio inputs

Plain language is better than a list of titles. One sentence about your work + the tone you want is enough.

⚡ 1 quota / generation

Or start from an example:

Activate Pro for higher shared generation limits, more saved drafts, and an ad-free experience when ads are active.See pricing →

Your five bios will show up here

Each card takes a different angle — pick the one that sounds most like you, or rewrite it inline before copying.

Bio is shown next to your name on X — even mobile users see it.Free character counter

Real-world bio references

These public profiles are useful style references for concise positioning. Check the profile live before copying any pattern because creators update bios frequently.

  • @levelsio

    Builder-first bio: states what he builds and who it helps, without fluffy adjectives.

  • @sahilbloom

    Credential + audience framing: clear domain ownership plus who should follow.

  • @theo

    Short, high-signal bio with personality. Minimal words, recognizable positioning.

How to think about a Twitter bio in 2026. Your bio is shown next to every reply, retweet, and follow — even on mobile where the name gets cut off. People read it the moment they decide whether to engage with you. Treat it like the speaker-rider on a stage, not a LinkedIn headline.

What makes a good Twitter bio

The bios that earn follows all do the same three things in 160 characters or fewer: they tell a stranger who you are in plain language, what you ship or stand for, and why it should matter to them. The five drafts in this tool take five different angles on that — pick the one your audience will recognize on day one.

✓ Do

  • Lead with the role you do, not generic adjectives.
  • Name one concrete artifact: a product, a book, a company, a niche.
  • Sound like a person, not a job description.
  • Use 1–2 emojis in the middle of a sentence, never stacked at the end.
  • Leave ~20 chars free for a future link or hashtag.

✗ Avoid

  • "Passionate about...", "Love to...", "On a mission to..."
  • Stacked emoji blocks: 🚀🔥💡✨
  • Quoting song lyrics as your entire bio.
  • Listing five job titles and no point of view.
  • "Thoughts are my own" — everyone knows, no one cares.

Three bio templates that always work

  1. Builder bio: Building [thing] for [audience]. Previously [credential]. Direct, proves momentum, easy for a stranger to retell. For founders, devs, makers.
  2. Specialist bio: I write about [niche]. New piece every [cadence]. Telegraphs depth without bragging. Good for writers, researchers, niche creators.
  3. Personality bio: One-line tagline + one warm aside. Worst to overthink; best when it could only be you. Good for creators, public-facing roles, anyone whose personal brand IS the brand.

Does Twitter count emojis or URLs differently in bios?

No. The X (Twitter) bio field counts every visible character as one — emojis, URLs, and CJK characters are NOT doubled the way they sometimes are inside tweet text. That gives you a hard 160-character ceiling to work inside. The bio editor on x.com will simply refuse to let you save past 160.

If you want a belt-and-braces count for an individual tweet (not a bio), use our Tweet Character Counter which honours the 23-character URL rule and weighted emojis.