🤳

🤳 selfie Emoji — Meaning, Copy & Paste

Quick info

Unicode
U+1F933
Shortcode
:selfie:
Category
People & Body
Subcategory
hand props
Added in
Unicode 3.0
Also known as
self portrait, phone camera, selfie stick hand, front camera

What Does the selfie Emoji 🤳 Mean?

Built for the social media generation, 🤳 the selfie emoji shows a hand holding a phone with the camera facing the user — exactly how billions of self-portraits get taken every day. Added in Unicode 9.0, it captures the modern obsession with documenting moments through smartphone cameras. People use it constantly in captions for self-portraits, like 'Quick selfie before the show 🤳' or 'New profile pic 🤳.' It's also used in conversations about getting ready, photoshoots, or asking someone to snap a picture, as in 'Send me a selfie 🤳.' Beyond posed photos, it works for any phone-camera situation — recording a TikTok, FaceTiming, or live-streaming.

Influencers, beauty creators, and travel bloggers use it heavily in posts about content creation. The emoji also lends itself to humor — captions like 'Trying to get the angle right 🤳' or 'Selfie failure 🤳' make light of the universal struggle to get the perfect shot. Pair it with 💄 for a glam selfie, ✨ for sparkle, or 😎 for a confident vibe.

Some users use it ironically when calling out selfie culture itself, while others use it sincerely to mark a milestone moment captured on camera. Whether you're posing in a mirror, recording a video, or just hyping a friend's new photo, the selfie emoji belongs to the language of modern self-documentation.

How to Use 🤳 selfie Emoji

“Sunset selfie 🤳”
“New profile pic 🤳”
“Send me a selfie 🤳”
Technical Details
UnicodeU+1F933
HTML Entity🤳
CSS Code\1F933
Shortcode:selfie:
Keywordscamera, phone, selfie
Unicode Version3.0

Frequently Asked Questions

What does 🤳 mean?

It shows a hand holding a smartphone to take a selfie, representing self-portraits, photo-taking, or any front-facing camera activity like video calls.

When was the selfie emoji added?

It was approved in Unicode 9.0 (2016), reflecting how central selfies had become to digital culture and social media at that time.