Title Case
Capitalise the first letter of each word in your text, the way headlines and titles are usually written.
About the Title Case tool
Title case capitalises the first letter of each word, the style used for headlines, book titles, and product names. This tool takes a line like the quick brown fox and returns The Quick Brown Fox. It is the quickest way to make headings look consistent without manually shifting each letter, and it works on a single title or a whole list of them.
How to use it
- Enter or paste the title you want to format.
- The capitalised version appears in the output as you type.
- Copy it into your heading, slide, or spreadsheet.
A caveat on style: strict editorial title case keeps small words such as a, an, the, and short prepositions lowercase unless they start the title. This tool capitalises the first letter of every word for simplicity, so you may want to lowercase a few minor words by hand to match a specific style guide like AP or Chicago. Conversion is done in your browser, so your text is never uploaded.
Frequently asked questions
Does this tool follow AP or Chicago title-case rules?
It uses simple title case, capitalising the first letter of every word. Strict style guides keep certain short words lowercase, so you may need to adjust minor words like the or of by hand.
What is the difference between title case and sentence case?
Title case capitalises the first letter of each word, while sentence case only capitalises the first word of each sentence. Use title case for headings and sentence case for body text.
Can I convert a whole list of titles at once?
Yes. Paste multiple lines and each word on every line is capitalised, so you can format a batch of titles in one go.
Is my text sent anywhere?
No. The formatting runs locally in your browser, so the titles you enter stay on your device.