Title Case Converter
Transform text instantly. Runs locally in your browser.
Input
Output
Tip: You can verify in DevTools โ Network that nothing is uploaded.
About this Title Case Converter
The Title Case Converter is a simple tool that transforms your text by capitalizing the first letter of each word. This formatting style is commonly used for titles, headings, labels, and other short pieces of text where clarity and structure matter.
Whether you are preparing article titles, naming files, formatting headings, or cleaning up copied text, this tool lets you convert text to title case instantly. Just paste your text into the input field and see the result immediately.
All processing happens locally in your browser. Nothing you paste is uploaded or stored, making this tool fast, private, and safe to use.
- Process text data quickly without external tools
- Transform content for development workflows
- Clean and format text for analysis
- Enable Auto to transform as you type
- Upload text files directly from your device
- Download the result when done
FAQ
No. Everything runs locally in your browser. Nothing you paste is sent to a server.
After the page loads once, it will typically keep working offline (unless you hard refresh with no cache).
No. Your input stays in your browser. Only optional preferences like theme or language may be stored.
Any plain text. You can paste text directly into the input box.
The Title Case Converter capitalizes the first letter of each word in your text. It is commonly used for titles, headings, and improving text readability.
Title case capitalizes the first letter of each word, while lowercase converts all letters to lowercase and uppercase converts all letters to uppercase.
This tool applies a simple and consistent title case transformation by capitalizing word beginnings. It does not apply language-specific exceptions such as keeping words like โandโ or โofโ lowercase.
No. Only alphabetic characters are affected. Numbers, punctuation, and symbols remain unchanged.
Title case is commonly used for article titles, headings, filenames, labels, and improving the visual structure of text content.