Pink Heart Emojis Copy and Paste
The pink heart emoji π©· was added to Unicode in 2022 (Emoji 15.0) and has quickly become one of the most-used hearts for soft love, cute affection, young romance, and gentle support. Copy the pink heart for messages, bios, captions, and posts where a red heart feels too direct but a white heart feels too neutral. The pink heart pairs naturally with cherry blossoms πΈ, ribbons π, sparkling hearts π, and other color hearts for soft-aesthetic posts. Because it's recent, very old devices may render π©· as a fallback character β modern iOS, Android, macOS, and Windows all show the pink heart correctly.
Popular Pink Heart Emojis
Pink Heart Emoji Meanings
- π©· Pink Heart β soft love, crushes, cute affection (Unicode 15.0).
- π Two Hearts β romance, friendship, sweet tone.
- π Sparkling Heart β excited admiration; pairs naturally with pink.
- π Growing Heart β warm growing affection.
- π Beating Heart β fluttering, nervous, infatuated.
- πΈ Cherry Blossom β soft, spring, paired with pink hearts.
- π Ribbon β coquette, soft, decorative.
- π Heart with Ribbon β gift, gentle love.
Pair Pink Heart With
Pink Heart Emojis for Bio
Pink Heart Emojis for Captions and Messages
Common Uses for Pink Heart Emojis
- Soft love messages β crushes, sweet partners, close friends.
- Cute bios that lean coquette, soft-girl, or playful.
- Captions on selfies, soft photos, and pastel-toned posts.
- Pair with white π€ and light blue π©΅ for soft palettes.
- Stand-alone reply for cute, wholesome content.
Pink Heart FAQ
When was the pink heart emoji added?
π©· was added in Unicode 15.0 in September 2022, alongside the light blue π©΅ and grey π©Ά hearts. It started appearing on iOS 16.4, Android 14, and modern desktop browsers from early 2023. Older devices may render it as an empty box if the system font hasn't been updated.
What does π©· mean vs π vs β€οΈ?
π©· is soft, gentle, and slightly younger in tone β it reads as cute or coquette without the full emotional weight of β€οΈ (direct love) or π (excited admiration). Use π©· for crushes, sweet partners, and soft-aesthetic posts. Use π for hype excitement. Use β€οΈ for sincere strong love.
How do I get a pink heart emoji?
Copy π©· from this page directly, or use your system emoji keyboard. On iOS, tap the smiley icon β search 'pink heart'. On Android, similar β Gboard supports pink heart on Android 14+. On Mac, press Ctrl+Cmd+Space. On Windows 11, press Win+. (period).
Why does pink heart show as an empty box for some friends?
Their device is on an older OS that predates Unicode 15.0. The character π©· is in the message; their system just doesn't have the glyph yet. They should update their phone OS. As a workaround, send π or π instead β older but visually similar pink-toned hearts.
Can I use pink heart in Instagram name and bio?
Yes. Instagram accepts the pink heart in both name and bio fields. Modern iPhones and Androids render it correctly. If you're worried about older viewers, pair π©· with π or π as a fallback β both will always render.
Technical Details
U+1FA77🩷🩷\u{1FA77}\U0001FA77\1FA77:pink_heart:Platform Display
The π©· 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 β 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.