Title Case Converter

Use the free Title Case converter to formats text for article titles and headings while keeping common connector words lowercase inside the title. Paste text, preview the result instantly, copy it, download it, and learn common SEO, URL, database, and form-field uses.

What Is Title Case?

Title Case is a text formatting tool that formats text for article titles and headings while keeping common connector words lowercase inside the title. It helps you move from pasted, messy, or inconsistent text to a predictable format without installing software or sending text through a server.

Features

  • Live input and output panels for quick comparison.
  • Instant Title Case conversion as you type or paste.
  • Copy and download controls for the converted result.
  • Dark interface that matches the Pro Case Converter homepage.
  • Works in the browser for short snippets, long paragraphs, labels, and technical text.

How to Use

  1. Paste or type text into the Input Text box.
  2. Review the converted Title Case result in the Output Text box.
  3. Use copy when you need the result immediately, or download it as a text file.
  4. Clear the input box when you want to start a new conversion.

Common Use

This Title Case converter is commonly used for blog titles, page titles, book titles, email subjects, and editorial headings. It is also useful when content is copied from documents, spreadsheets, websites, code editors, CMS fields, or social platforms and needs a cleaner final format.

Title Case vs. Other Case Tools

Title Case is best when you specifically need A Guide to Better Text Formatting style output from text like a guide to better text formatting. Other tools such as Sentence case, Title Case, Snake_Case, Kebab-Case, Camel Case, or Pascal Case may be better when your target is editorial writing, URLs, code identifiers, class names, or database fields.

Slug and URL Formatting

For URLs and slugs, choose a format that stays readable and consistent. Kebab-Case is usually the safest choice for public web slugs, while path/case is useful for route examples and folder-like structures. Title Case can help prepare source text before you choose the final URL format.

Database and Form Field Naming

Database columns and form fields often need stable naming rules. Snake_Case is common for database fields, camelCase is common in JavaScript forms, and Pascal Case is common for types or components. Use this Title Case page when its output matches your naming convention or when you need to compare formats before finalizing field names.