The Check Spoofed Unicode Text Tool is built to expose sneaky characters that aren’t what they seem. Sometimes a character looks like an ordinary “A” or “1,” but it’s actually from a different script Cyrillic, Greek, or full-width Unicode and it’s used in scams, usernames, or obfuscation. Paste your text, and the tool highlights anything suspicious so you can catch the fakes before they cause trouble.
How to Use:
- Paste your suspicious text into the input box on the left.
- The tool will highlight any spoofed characters in brackets, like
[о]
or[𝟷]
. - Use the toggles in the Options box to choose whether you want to flag spoofed letters, digits, or both.
- Click Copy Output to copy the flagged result.
- Click Export to File to download the checked version.
- Use Clear All to reset and start over.
What Check Spoofed Unicode Text Tool can do:
Check Spoofed Unicode Text Tool scans for Unicode characters that look like familiar Latin letters or digits but aren’t the real thing. These impersonators often slip past humans and filters alike used in spam, phishing links, or deceptive usernames. This tool flags them in real-time, lets you copy or export the result, and gives you full control with toggles for letters and digits. It’s all client-side and instant.
Example:
Input:
Нello 𝟷𝟸𝟹
Output:
[Н]ello [𝟷][𝟸][𝟹]
Common Use Cases:
This is a go-to tool if you’re vetting usernames, cleaning up pasted text, or checking for phishing tricks. Social media handles, email addresses, or even commit messages can contain characters that aren’t what they look like. With this tool, you’ll spot them instantly no guesswork, no risk.
Useful Tools & Suggestions:
Worried about lookalikes slipping through? Analyze Unicode lets you break down each character so you can spot sneaky substitutions. You might also want to try Convert Unicode to ASCII it’s a quick way to flatten out tricky symbols that might otherwise blend in.