How to Copy and Paste Emojis
Browse emojis by category or use the search bar to find exactly what you need. Click any emoji to instantly copy it to your clipboard. Then paste it anywhere — social media posts, messages, emails, documents, or website content. A “Copied!” notification appears to confirm the emoji is ready to paste.
The collection includes over 400 popular emojis organized into categories: Smileys, People, Animals, Food, Travel, Activities, Objects, Symbols, and Flags. Use the category buttons to quickly jump to the section you need, or simply type a keyword in the search bar.
Why Use an Emoji Picker Tool?
Not every device or application makes it easy to find the right emoji. Desktop computers often lack a convenient emoji keyboard. Some email clients don’t have built-in emoji support. And when you’re writing social media content or marketing copy, you want to browse visually rather than scrolling through a tiny phone keyboard. This tool gives you the full emoji catalog in a large, easy-to-browse grid that works on any device.
Emojis have become essential for digital communication in 2026. Studies show that social media posts with emojis receive 25% higher engagement than text-only posts. Marketing emails with emojis in subject lines see higher open rates. Adding the right emoji can convey tone and emotion that plain text simply can’t.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will these emojis look the same everywhere?
Emojis are Unicode characters, so they work everywhere that supports text. However, the visual design varies slightly between platforms — Apple, Google, Samsung, and Microsoft each have their own emoji art styles. The emoji you copy here will display in whatever style your recipient’s device uses.
Can I copy multiple emojis at once?
Each click copies one emoji. To build a string of emojis, paste them one at a time into your target text field. You can also paste into a text editor, build your combination, then copy the whole string.
Are all emojis supported?
This tool includes the most commonly used emojis from the Unicode standard. Very new emojis (released in the last few months) may not appear on older devices even if copied correctly.
