Braille TranslatorConvert text to Braille Unicode characters.

Braille Translator
Convert text to Braille Unicode characters.
Enter Text
Type text to convert to Braille characters.
View Braille
See your text represented as Braille Unicode characters.
Copy Output
Copy the Braille text for educational or accessibility purposes.
What Is Braille Translator?
A Braille translator converts text into Braille Unicode characters. Braille is a tactile writing system used by people who are visually impaired, consisting of patterns of raised dots. This tool translates English letters, numbers, and common punctuation into their Unicode Braille equivalents (U+2800 to U+28FF range). While the Unicode representation is visual rather than tactile, it's useful for education, accessibility documentation, and creative design.
Why Use Our Braille Translator?
- Convert text to standard Braille Unicode
- Supports letters, numbers, and punctuation
- Educational tool for learning Braille patterns
- Useful for accessibility documentation
- Unicode output can be copied anywhere
Common Use Cases
Education
Learn Braille letter patterns by converting text and studying the dot arrangements.
Accessibility Documentation
Include Braille representations in accessibility guidelines and documentation.
Creative Design
Use Braille characters in design projects for visual texture or inclusivity messaging.
Awareness Campaigns
Create Braille content for visual impairment awareness materials.
Technical Guide
The Braille translator uses a character mapping table from ASCII to Unicode Braille Patterns (U+2800-U+28FF). Each Braille character is a 2×3 grid of dots, encoded as a single Unicode code point where each bit represents one dot position. The mapping follows Grade 1 Braille (uncontracted), where each letter maps to one Braille cell. Numbers use the same patterns as letters A-J preceded by a number indicator, though this simplified tool maps numbers directly. The tool lowercases input before mapping since Braille is inherently case-insensitive in its basic form.
Tips & Best Practices
- 1Braille has 63 possible patterns (6 dots, each on or off)
- 2Letters and digits 1-9 share the same patterns — context distinguishes them
- 3Unicode Braille is visual; actual Braille is tactile (raised dots)
- 4Grade 1 Braille maps one character per cell; Grade 2 uses contractions
- 5Louis Braille invented the system in 1824 at age 15
Related Tools

NATO Phonetic Alphabet
Convert text to NATO phonetic alphabet for clear communication.

Morse Code Encoder
Convert text to Morse code (dots and dashes).

Unicode Text Generator
Convert text to Unicode styled variants — bold, italic, script, fraktur, and more.

ROT13 Encoder/Decoder
Apply ROT13 cipher — shift each letter by 13 positions. Encoding and decoding are the same operation.

Pig Latin Converter
Convert English text to Pig Latin word game language.

Word Counter
Count words, unique words, characters, and see word frequency in any text.
Frequently Asked Questions
QIs this real Braille?
QIs it Grade 1 or Grade 2 Braille?
QCan visually impaired users read Unicode Braille?
QDoes it handle uppercase?
QWhat about numbers?
About Braille Translator
Braille Translator is a free online tool from FreeToolkit.ai. All processing happens directly in your browser — your data never leaves your device. No registration required. No ads. Just fast, reliable tools.







