Bluesky Bio Generator
Bio Generators
Write a memorable Bluesky bio that turns profile visits into follows, generated in seconds. Free to use, no signup, tuned to Bluesky.
Bluesky Bio Generator
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What goes in a Bluesky bio
Your Bluesky bio, the field labelled "description" when you edit your profile, holds up to 256 characters and sits right under your display name and handle. Plain text only: links you type become tappable automatically, but there's no clickable bio-link slot and no rich formatting. The detail most people miss is that mentions and hashtags written in your bio don't hyperlink the way they do in posts, so spell out what you do instead of relying on tags to carry the message. Line breaks work, so use them.
Bluesky bio tips
- You get 256 characters, so lead with what you actually do before adding personality or a feeds list.
- Typed URLs auto-link in your bio, but there's no separate link button, so put your main link first.
- Hashtags and mentions in the bio are plain text, not tappable, so don't lean on them for discovery.
- Emoji and line breaks render fine and help scanning, but heavy Unicode fonts can hurt screen-reader output.
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Bluesky Bio Generator — common questions
Latest questions readers ask us about this topic.
What's the character limit for a Bluesky bio?
Bluesky bios allow up to 256 characters, counted as grapheme clusters, so most emoji count as one. It's roomier than a handle but tighter than a post, which caps at 300 characters.
Do links in a Bluesky bio actually work?
Yes. Any URL you type into the description field becomes tappable automatically, no markup needed. There's no dedicated link button, so place your most important link near the start where it won't get buried.
Can I use hashtags in my Bluesky bio?
You can type them, but unlike in posts, hashtags and @mentions in the bio stay plain text and aren't clickable. For discovery, describe your topics in words rather than relying on tags to do the work.
Related questions
The sub-questions readers ask next — answered, with where to go.
You're writing for the truncation point. LinkedIn shows roughly the first two lines before “…see more”, so the job of the hook is to make stopping feel worth it — a specific claim, a tension, or a number, never a throat-clear like 'I've been thinking about…'. A single bold or italic phrase in that opening makes it stand out in a feed of identical fonts. Keep the payoff a real one; clickbait that doesn't deliver trains the feed to bury you.
Format your hookLead with the searchable terms. LinkedIn weighs the opening words of your headline, so put the role and keywords people search first, then the personality after. 'Fractional CMO · B2B SaaS growth — occasionally funny' beats a clever line that buries what you do. Keep it under the character limit so nothing truncates, and add italic emphasis only after the keywords, never before them.
Generate a bioA bio has one job: answer 'why should I follow you?' in the time it takes to skim. Lead with who you help and the outcome, not your job title; add one proof point (a number, a credential, a notable client); end with a reason to stay. Keep links and @handles in plain text so they stay tappable, and use at most one styled phrase for emphasis. Specific beats clever every time.
Generate a bioSparingly, and with intent. One bold phrase in the hook earns attention; bold on every other line cancels itself out and reads as shouting. Italic is better for set-apart content — a client quote, a product name, an aside. The accessibility cost is real: screen readers announce styled Unicode awkwardly, so never put essential details (dates, links, numbers people need) in styled characters.
Italic for LinkedInExplore the topic cluster
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