Free Tool3 of 3 free uses today

Twitter / X Bio Generator

5 bio variations under 160 characters — each with a different angle to convert profile visitors to followers.

How it works

1

Describe yourself

Your role, what you're known for, your personality and tone. The more specific, the better the bio — generic inputs produce generic bios.

2

Get 5 distinct bios

Achievement-first, niche + outcome promise, personality-forward, story-in-one-line, and minimalist — five fundamentally different approaches.

3

Pick the one that sounds like you

The best bio sounds like your tweets. If your bio and your content feel like the same voice, you'll convert more profile visitors to followers.

What a high-converting Twitter/X bio looks like

You have 7 seconds and 160 characters. Every word either earns a follow or loses one.

Lead with a credibility signal

Not your job title — your result or proof. 'Grew 3 SaaS products to $1M ARR' beats 'SaaS Entrepreneur' every time.

State who you write for

'I tweet about [topic] for [audience]' is a simple but highly effective formula. It immediately self-selects the right followers.

Show your personality

Your bio should preview what following you will feel like. Dry wit, contrarian takes, warm teaching, raw data — whatever your tone is, the bio should hint at it.

Include a call to action

Link in bio reference, newsletter mention, DM-open signal. One CTA — not three. Most accounts skip this entirely, which is a missed opportunity.

Pass the 'would a stranger follow this?' test

Ask 3 people who don't know you. If they can't tell why they'd want your tweets, the bio isn't working.

Frequently asked questions

How long should a Twitter bio be?

Twitter enforces a 160-character hard limit. The ideal is 130-155 characters — enough to fit everything that matters, with room for emojis if they fit the brand. Shorter is fine if it says enough.

Should I use emojis in my Twitter bio?

Only if they match your personality and serve a purpose. An emoji used as a visual separator or status symbol (🚀, ✍️, 📊) can improve scannability. Emojis used to pad a thin bio make it look worse, not better.

Should I mention my employer in my bio?

Only if the employer is recognizable and adds credibility (ex-Google, currently at Stripe). Unknown company names waste characters. Focus on what you've built, not where you work.

Should I update my bio regularly?

Update it whenever your professional context changes or your content focus shifts significantly. A stale bio that doesn't match your current content confuses new visitors about whether to follow.

Does my bio affect my reach on X/Twitter?

The bio itself has minimal direct algorithmic impact. But it heavily affects profile-to-follow conversion rate — which determines how fast you build an audience from people who discover your tweets.

Building your personal brand?

Get 3 free AI generations daily — LinkedIn bio, Twitter bio, social posts, and more.

Start free — no credit card →