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TikTok Bio Generator

Bio Generators

Write a memorable TikTok bio that turns profile visits into follows, generated in seconds. Free to use, no signup, tuned to TikTok.

Updated Jun 15, 2026 Maintained by BoldlyType editors

TikTok Bio Generator

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What goes in a TikTok bio

Your TikTok bio sits under your username on your profile and caps out at 80 characters, counting spaces and emojis. That tight ceiling forces a choice: say who you are, what you post, or why someone should follow, but rarely all three. The thing most people miss is that the bio itself isn't clickable text. Only the website field renders as a tappable link, and that link option unlocks once your account qualifies, so dropping a raw URL into your bio just wastes precious characters. Treat those 80 characters as a hook, not a homepage.

TikTok bio tips

  • Lead with what you post, not a greeting; viewers decide to follow in the first line they read.
  • Line breaks don't survive TikTok's bio editor on most devices, so write it to read cleanly as one flowing block.
  • Hashtags and @mentions in your bio aren't tappable and won't help discovery, so spend characters on plain words instead.
  • Put your real call to action in the link field below the bio, since bio text itself can't be tapped or clicked.

TikTok Bio Generator — common questions

Latest questions readers ask us about this topic.

What's the character limit for a TikTok bio?

TikTok bios are capped at 80 characters, including spaces, emojis and punctuation. Emojis often count as two characters each, so a single emoji can quietly eat more of your limit than you'd expect.

Can you add a clickable link in your TikTok bio?

Not in the bio text itself. TikTok offers a separate website field that renders as a tappable link, but that option only appears once your account meets TikTok's follower threshold for adding a bio link.

Do hashtags work in a TikTok bio?

You can type hashtags and @mentions into your bio, but they stay as plain text. They aren't tappable, don't feed the search or recommendation system, and won't boost your discoverability, so they mostly just burn characters.

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 hook

Lead 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 bio

A 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 bio

Sparingly, 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 LinkedIn

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