Title Case Converter

Convert headlines to proper Title Case, plus Start, Sentence, UPPER and lower case.

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Title Case follows headline rules — it capitalises the principal words and keeps short joining words like “and”, “of” and “the” lowercase, except as the first or last word. Start Case capitalises the first letter of every word. Sentence case capitalises only the start of each sentence. Runs entirely in your browser.

How to convert to title case

Paste your headline or text and click Title Case for proper headline capitalisation. The result appears below; click Copy result to grab it. Switch between Title, Start, Sentence, UPPER and lower case to compare.

Where each style is used

Title and Start Case are for headlines, titles and buttons; Sentence case for body copy and descriptions; UPPER and lower for normalising data. Smart Title Case is the safe default for blog posts and headings.

Questions

What makes the Title Case 'smart'?
It follows headline style: principal words are capitalised, while short joining words — and, of, the, to, in and similar — stay lowercase, except when they're the first or last word of the title. That matches how editors capitalise headlines.
How is Start Case different from Title Case?
Start Case capitalises the first letter of every word with no exceptions, so even "and" and "of" are capitalised. Title Case keeps those minor words lowercase for a more natural headline look.
What does Sentence case do?
Sentence case lowercases everything, then capitalises only the first letter of each sentence — the way ordinary prose is written.