Arrow Emojis Copy and Paste
Arrow emojis are used for direction, navigation, callouts, list bullets, scroll cues, links, and step-by-step guides. Copy popular arrow emojis and arrow symbols to point at the next step, link to a related post, mark a CTA, or build a clean bulleted layout in places where rich formatting isn't available. Single-direction arrows work as inline pointers, double-headed arrows imply two-way relationships, and curved or looping arrows describe reversals or refreshes. This page collects copy-ready arrow glyphs with simple meanings and common use cases for social bios, captions, instructions, and microcopy.
Popular Arrow Emojis
Arrow Emoji Meanings
- ➡️ Right Arrow — next, forward, continue.
- ⬅️ Left Arrow — back, previous.
- ⬆️ Up Arrow — scroll up, increase, top.
- ⬇️ Down Arrow — scroll down, decrease, below.
- ↗️ Up-Right Arrow — diagonal forward, growth.
- ↘️ Down-Right Arrow — diagonal down, decline.
- ↔️ Left-Right Arrow — two-way, back-and-forth.
- 🔄 Counterclockwise Arrows — refresh, sync, redo.
- ▶️ Play Button — start, play, go.
- ➤ Black Arrowhead — compact directional marker.
Common Uses for Arrow Emojis
- Step-by-step guides: point to the next instruction or input.
- List bullets: use arrows in social bios where rich lists aren't available.
- Calls to action: "swipe →", "link in bio →", "scroll for more →".
- Inline references: link readers from one section, page, or person to another.
- Decorative dividers: pair arrows with text for a clean, structured caption.
Technical Details
U+27A1 U+FE0F➡ ️➡ ️\u{27A1}\u{FE0F}\u27A1\uFE0F\27A1 \FE0F:arrow_right:➡\uFE0E➡\uFE0FPlatform Display
The ➡️ emoji renders the same Unicode codepoint on every device, but the exact drawing varies by platform vendor. Apple, Google (Noto), Microsoft (Segoe UI Emoji), Samsung, WhatsApp, Facebook, and Twitter/X each ship their own emoji font, so the same character can look slightly different between iPhone, Android, Windows, and the web. Copy is identical across platforms — when you paste this glyph anywhere, the receiving device draws it with its own font. For a look that's identical everywhere, use the text-symbol alternative listed above (when one exists); text symbols render the same on every platform.
Related Pages
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