Button Emojis
41 emojis tagged button in the official Unicode CLDR project. Click any emoji for its meaning, copy-paste, and per-platform rendering.
Button emojis depict the playback, navigation, and labeled controls you'd find on a stereo, video player, or signage. The set covers 🔄 counterclockwise arrows, ⏪ fast reverse, 🔼 upwards button, 🔽 downwards, and labeled badges like 🆗 OK, 🆕 NEW, 🆒 COOL, and 🆙 UP. Designers use them in tutorials and product mockups, while everyday users sprinkle them into captions to mark sections, indicate replays, or call attention to a specific item. The labeled buttons (🆓 FREE, 🆔 ID) also work as quick visual tags on flyers and group-chat polls.
- 🔄 counterclockwise arrows button
- 🔀 shuffle tracks button
- 🔁 repeat button
- 🔂 repeat single button
- ⏪ fast reverse button
- 🔼 upwards button
- ⏫ fast up button
- 🔽 downwards button
- 🔅 dim button
- 🆎 AB button (blood type)
- 🆑 CL button
- 🆓 FREE button
- 🆔 ID button
- 🆕 NEW button
- 🆖 NG button
- 🆗 OK button
- 🆘 SOS button
- 🆙 UP! button
- 🆚 VS button
- 🈁 Japanese “here” button
- 🈶 Japanese “not free of charge” button
- 🈯 Japanese “reserved” button
- 🉐 Japanese “bargain” button
- 🈹 Japanese “discount” button
- 🈚 Japanese “free of charge” button
- 🈲 Japanese “prohibited” button
- 🉑 Japanese “acceptable” button
- 🈸 Japanese “application” button
- 🈴 Japanese “passing grade” button
- 🈳 Japanese “vacancy” button
- 🈵 Japanese “no vacancy” button
- 🔘 radio button
- 🔳 white square button
- 🔲 black square button
- 🈺 Japanese “open for business” button
- ⏬ fast down button
- ❎ cross mark button
- 🆒 COOL button
- ✅ check mark button
- 🔆 bright button
- ⏩ fast-forward button
Frequently asked about button emojis
What's the difference between 🔼 and ⏫?
🔼 is a single upwards-pointing triangle representing one step up — like increasing volume by one notch or scrolling one page. ⏫ is the double-triangle 'fast up' version, meaning skip forward or jump to top. They share the same playback metaphor as physical media controls.
Are the labeled buttons (🆗, 🆕) considered emojis or text?
They're true emojis with their own Unicode codepoints, even though they contain Latin letters. Platforms render them as colored badges rather than plain text, which is why they look like buttons rather than the actual letters O-K or N-E-W.
More emojis like button
Vector-matched by meaning — similar uses or feelings.
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