Convert any text to Title Case — capital first letter on every word, lowercase elsewhere. Useful for headlines, blog titles, book titles, and product names.
Title Case capitalises the first letter of every word. It's the standard formatting for most English-language headlines, book titles, and entity names. AP and Chicago style differ slightly on prepositions and articles, but Title Case as implemented here is the simple, widely-accepted version.
Paste your text and click Convert. The tool finds every word boundary and capitalises the first letter while lowercasing the rest. Punctuation is preserved.
Use it for blog post titles, video and podcast names, product launch headlines, and email subject lines that need to look formal. For minor words (a, the, of, in), AP/Chicago style says lowercase except as the first or last word — but the simple capitalize-everything approach is universally readable.
For SEO meta titles, Title Case generally outperforms all-lowercase or all-uppercase in click-through tests. Keep titles under 60 characters to avoid Google truncation. Avoid Title Case in body content — it disrupts reading flow.
Yes — words on either side of a hyphen are both capitalised.
Proper nouns stay capitalised. The tool's case algorithm uppercases the first letter of every word regardless.
Yes — AP says lowercase 'a', 'an', 'the', short prepositions, and conjunctions unless they start or end the title. This tool capitalises everything for simplicity.
Explore more case & format on the tool hub — or jump straight to the UPPERCASE Converter, lowercase Converter, Sentence Case Converter.