Cat text faces with paws, whiskers, sleepy faces, and cute reactions

Cat Kaomoji

Copy cat kaomoji and Japanese cat text faces with paws, whiskers, sleepy expressions, cute reactions, and aesthetic cat symbols for Discord, Instagram, TikTok, Roblox, and everyday messages.

Cat Kaomoji copy and paste

130 text faces shown in All.

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Showing 130 cat kaomoji text faces.

Discord messages

Use cat kaomoji for playful replies, server chats, and quick reaction messages.

Instagram bios

Short cat faces and paw accents can make a profile feel cute without taking too much space.

TikTok captions

Cat reactions work well for cozy, cute, sleepy, or playful caption moods.

Roblox names

Compact cat faces are easier to reuse in display names and short profile text.

How to use cat kaomoji

Playful replies

  • ฅ^•ﻌ•^ฅ reads as mischief, good for teasing
  • /ᐠ ˵> ⩊ <˵マ shows delight without words
  • ₍^ >ヮ<^₎ .ᐟ.ᐟ adds motion when a plain face feels flat

Being unimpressed

  • ₍^._.^₎ 𐒡 says nothing and means plenty
  • (=✪ᆽ✪=) turns surprise into a joke
  • Follow a complaint with a cat and it reads as fond, not sharp

Bios and captions

  • Separate lines with ⋆˚🐾˖° instead of a hyphen
  • /ᐠ - ˕ -マ₊˚⊹♡₊ ⊹ works as a decorated sign-off
  • One cat per line; two competes for attention

Usernames

  • ᓚᘏᗢ is short, spaceless, and widely supported
  • Avoid tails such as Ⳋ, which some platforms strip
  • Test the name on mobile before committing

Cat Kaomoji message templates

Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.

Cat Kaomoji meanings

ฅ^•ﻌ•^ฅ

The archetypal cat kaomoji: two raised paws, whiskers, and a small nose. Playful rather than sleepy.

ᓚᘏᗢ

A cat seen from the side, curled and calm. Short enough for usernames and instantly readable.

≽^•⩊•^≼

A rounded cat face with pointed ears. A good neutral cat for general use.

/ᐠ - ˕ -マ Ⳋ

A sitting cat with a tail. The マ is the muzzle and Ⳋ the tail; it reads as content and settled.

(=^・ω・^=)

The classic ASCII-era cat, older and more widely recognised than the newer bracket styles.

₍^. .^₎⟆

A small cat with a curled tail. Compact enough for a chat reply.

(ミΦ ﻌ Φミ)∫

Wide round eyes and a raised tail. Reads as alert or curious.

ᓚ₍⑅^..^₎♡

A curled cat beside a heart. Affectionate rather than playful.

(=✪ᆽ✪=)

Startled, saucer-wide eyes. Useful for surprise reactions.

/ᐠ ˵> ⩊ <˵マ

A cat squeezing its eyes shut with delight. Pair it with good news.

₍^ >ヮ<^₎ .ᐟ.ᐟ

An excited cat with motion marks. The .ᐟ.ᐟ implies bouncing.

⚞^. .^⚟

A cat framed by brackets that suggest peeking round a corner.

₍^._.^₎ 𐒡

A quiet, blank-faced cat. Reads as unimpressed or half-asleep.

/ᐠ - ˕ -マ₊˚⊹♡₊ ⊹

A calm cat trailing sparkle and a heart. Decorative, best for bios.

⋆˚🐾˖°

A paw print accent rather than a face. Use it as a divider in profile text.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Cat Kaomoji — background

The characters are borrowed from other alphabets

Characters that look purpose-built for text faces are almost always loaned. ᐢ is Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, ﻌ is Arabic, and ᗜ is Canadian Aboriginal too. Nobody designed them for kaomoji; the community simply found shapes that read as ears, whiskers, and grins.

Rare characters are why some faces break

A kaomoji renders only if the reader's device ships a font covering every character in it. Older Android builds omit large parts of Unicode, so heavily decorated faces collapse into empty boxes. Faces built from common punctuation have survived two decades precisely because they demand nothing unusual.

Copying is the whole distribution mechanism

Kaomoji spread with no central registry, no approval body, and no version numbers, unlike emoji which need a Unicode proposal. A face becomes standard purely because enough people copied it, which is why several near-identical variants of the same expression circulate at once.

The =^..^= cat is older than most of the web

The ASCII cat built from equals signs and carets circulated on Usenet and IRC in the early 1990s, when a face had to survive seven-bit encodings. It still works today for the same reason: every character in it is plain ASCII.

The modern マ cats came from mobile Japan

The current wave of cats using マ as a muzzle and ᐠ as an ear emerged from Japanese mobile messaging in the 2010s, once phones reliably shipped fonts covering katakana and Canadian Aboriginal syllabics. They are far younger than they look.

What is cat kaomoji?

Cat kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces that use ears, paws, whiskers, and tails to look like cats. They are plain Unicode text, not images.

How do I copy cat kaomoji?

Tap any cat on this page and it copies as plain text, ready to paste into chats, bios, captions, or usernames.

Do cat kaomoji work on Discord and Instagram?

Yes. They are Unicode text characters, so they work in most apps that accept copied text.

Which cat kaomoji are best for short messages?

Compact faces paste most cleanly: ᓚᘏᗢ, ฅ^•ﻌ•^ฅ, ₍^. .^₎⟆, and (=^・ω・^=) all fit inside a normal reply.

What do the マ and ᐠ characters mean?

They are not cat-specific. マ is the katakana "ma" reused as a muzzle, and ᐠ comes from Canadian Aboriginal syllabics and reads as an ear. Kaomoji borrow shapes wherever they find them.

Why do some cats show as boxes?

The reader's device lacks a font covering those characters. Older cats built from ASCII, such as (=^・ω・^=), avoid the problem entirely.

What is the difference between ᆽ and ﻌ?

Both act as a mouth or nose. ᆽ is Hangul and gives a wider, flatter muzzle; ﻌ is Arabic and reads as narrower whiskers. The choice is purely visual.

Can I use cat kaomoji in a username?

Yes. ᓚᘏᗢ is the most reliable because it is short, has no spaces, and uses characters with broad font coverage.

Are paw prints kaomoji?

Strictly they are decorations rather than faces, but they belong to the same tradition and are collected alongside cat faces as accents and dividers.

How many cat kaomoji are on this page?

There are 130 curated cats, grouped into cute cats, classic faces, paws, aesthetic accents, and reactions.