AI Bio Generator
One input, three platform-ready bios — each written to its character limit.
A bio has one job: let a stranger decide in three seconds whether to follow, connect, or move on. The mistakes are always the same — trying to fit your whole résumé, or being so vague you could be anyone. Each platform has its own physics (X caps at 160 characters, Instagram at 150, LinkedIn headlines at 220), and this generator writes to each limit instead of forcing one bio everywhere, with the character count shown so nothing gets truncated mid-thought.
What makes a bio worth the three seconds it gets
- One concrete thing you do, stated like a fact. “Building calendar tools for freelancers” survives skimming; “tech enthusiast on a journey” is invisible because ten million bios already say it.
- One reason to care: a proof point, an outcome, or genuine personality. “Previously Google Calendar team” or “used by 4,000 freelancers” does in five words what paragraphs of self-description can't.
- One pointer at the end — what you post about, or where the link goes. A bio that ends with direction converts profile visits into follows instead of shrugs.
- Compress differently per platform. X rewards personality in 160 characters, LinkedIn rewards clarity about who you serve, Instagram rewards vibe plus a reason to tap the link — same facts, three different cuts.
- Cut anything that could describe a thousand other people. The test for every word: would a stranger, reading only this, know it was you and not your competitor?
Example output
Who are you / what do you do?: Indie developer building calendar tools for freelancers, previously at Google. Platform: all three.
LINKEDIN (142 chars) Building calendar tools for freelancers who bill by the hour · ex-Google Calendar · I write about scheduling, pricing and indie software X / TWITTER (127 chars) ex-Google, now building calendar tools for freelancers. shipping in public, complaining about timezones professionally. INSTAGRAM (98 chars) calendar tools for freelancers 🗓 ex-google · building in public latest experiment ↓
Frequently asked questions
- What makes a good social media bio?
- One concrete thing you do, one reason to care (proof, outcome, or personality), and one pointer (what you post about, or a link). Cut everything that could describe a thousand other people — that's the entire discipline.
- Should my bio be the same on every platform?
- Same facts, different compression. X rewards personality in 160 characters; LinkedIn rewards clarity about who you serve; Instagram rewards vibe plus a reason to tap the link. The tool generates all three variants from one input.
- Should I use emojis in a professional bio?
- One or two on Instagram, maybe one on X, none on LinkedIn unless your industry is casual. Emojis as bullet separators read fine; emojis as substance (“🚀🔥💯”) read as compensating for having nothing to say.
- Why is this free — what's the catch?
- No catch and no signup. This tool is funded by EaseClaw, an AI agent that finds people publicly asking for what you sell and drafts your replies. If the free tool is useful, some people try the $9 trial. That's the whole business model.
More free tools
Instagram Bio Generator150 characters: who you are, why follow, why tap the link.LinkedIn Headline GeneratorYour headline follows you into every comment, DM and search result. Make those 220 characters work.Tagline GeneratorTen taglines in three styles — direct, bold, playful — none of them “Innovate. Elevate.”