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Instagram Bio Writer

Fill in 3 fields and get 3 punchy bio variations under 150 characters, ready to copy.

Your Instagram bio gets 150 characters to explain what you do, who it helps, and why someone should follow. That's a tight brief. Answer three short questions and get three bio formats built from your answers, each with a live character count so nothing gets clipped when you paste it in.

How to use it

  • Describe what you do in a few words.
  • Describe who you help or the result you deliver.
  • Add your call to action, like a link prompt or a DM keyword.
  • Hit write my bio and copy whichever of the three variations fits best.

What makes a good Instagram bio?

A bio has one job: convert a profile visitor into a follower in the two seconds they spend deciding. The bios that do this answer three questions fast. What is this account about? Is it for someone like me? What do I do next? That's why the tool asks for those three inputs: a bio missing any of them leaks followers.

Clarity beats cleverness here, and it isn't close. 'Digital alchemist crafting visual stories' tells a visitor nothing. 'I teach freelancers how to price their work' tells them everything. Puns and vibes work for accounts people already know. For everyone else, the specific version wins, even when it feels less impressive to write.

How do you get the most out of 150 characters?

Skip words that describe the platform instead of you. 'Welcome to my page' and 'daily posts about' spend characters on things the visitor can already see. Numbers earn their space: 'helped 200+ coaches' or 'save 2 hours a day' is specific proof in a handful of characters. And the last line should always be the CTA, because it sits directly above your link and tells the visitor what the link is for.

The name field is a separate, underused asset. It's searchable, unlike most of your bio, so putting a keyword there ('Priya | Fitness Coach' rather than just 'Priya') helps people find you through Instagram search without spending any of your 150 characters.

What should you do with the generated bios?

Treat them as drafts. The tool combines your three answers into structured formats with separators and a couple of emojis, and the character counter warns you when a variation runs close to the limit. After pasting into Instagram, add your own line breaks, since the tool outputs a single line and stacked short lines are easier to scan on a profile. Swap the emojis for ones you actually use, or delete them. Then leave it alone for a month and check whether profile visits are turning into follows before rewriting again.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Instagram bio character limit?

150 characters, including emojis and spaces. The link, name field, and category label are separate and don't count against it.

Are these bios AI generated?

No. The tool slots your three answers into three fixed bio structures, so the quality of the output depends on the quality of your inputs. Specific answers produce a specific bio; vague answers produce a vague one.

Should I put keywords in my bio?

Yes, one or two natural ones. Instagram search reads the name field most strongly, so put your main keyword there, and let the bio text describe your value in plain language rather than stuffing terms.

How often should I update my bio?

Whenever your offer or focus changes, and otherwise rarely. A bio is a conversion asset, not a status update. If profile visits aren't converting to follows, that's the signal to rework it.

Do line breaks work in Instagram bios?

Yes, and they help readability a lot. The tool outputs single-line bios with separators, so add breaks after pasting, either directly in the app or by writing the bio in a notes app first.

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