Facebook Bio Generator
Bio Generators
Write a memorable Facebook bio that turns profile visits into follows, generated in seconds. Free to use, no signup, tuned to Facebook.
Facebook Bio Generator
Powered by AI. Free. No signup.
What goes in a Facebook bio
On a personal Facebook profile, the bio is the short "Bio" field under your name in the Intro box, capped at 101 characters. Pages have a separate, longer description in the About section. The thing most people miss is that the personal bio shows as a single block with no clickable links and no real hashtag support, so it works as a one-line introduction, not a landing page. Keep it to a sentence that says who you are or what you post, and put any URL in the dedicated Website field instead.
Facebook bio tips
- The personal profile bio caps at 101 characters, so write one clear sentence rather than trying to list everything about you.
- Links pasted into the bio render as plain text, not clickable; use the separate Website field in the Intro section instead.
- Emoji count toward your character limit and can break across some devices, so use one or two for tone, not decoration.
- Pages get a fuller About description with more room, so don't reuse a personal-style one-liner where you have space to explain.
Related tools
Facebook Bio Generator — common questions
Latest questions readers ask us about this topic.
What's the character limit for a Facebook bio?
A personal Facebook profile bio is limited to 101 characters, including spaces and emoji. Facebook Pages use a separate, much longer description field in the About section, so the tight limit only applies to personal profiles.
Do hashtags or links work in a Facebook bio?
Not usefully. In the personal profile bio, links appear as plain unclickable text and hashtags aren't linked the way they are in posts. Add your URL through the dedicated Website field in the Intro section instead.
Where does the Facebook bio actually appear?
It sits in the Intro box near the top of your personal profile, just under your name and profile picture, above details like your work, location and join date. It's one of the first things visitors read.
Related questions
The sub-questions readers ask next — answered, with where to go.
Explore the topic cluster
A wider set of tools and guides on this topic.