π» smiling cat with heart-eyes Emoji β Meaning, Copy & Paste
Quick info
- Unicode
- U+1F63B
- Shortcode
:smiling-cat-with-heart-eyes:- Category
- Smileys & Emotion
- Subcategory
- cat faces
- Added in
- Unicode 0.6
- Also known as
- heart eyes cat emoji, love cat emoji, smitten cat emoji, in love cat emoji
What Does the smiling cat with heart-eyes Emoji π» Mean?
Cat face with two big pink hearts in place of eyes, mouth pulled into a delighted smile β π» is the feline counterpart to π, the famous heart-eyes emoji. It's the cat version of being absolutely smitten, head-over-paws in love, completely enchanted. The hearts are the giveaway: this cat is so charmed it can't see straight.
In texting, π» reads as adoration in cat form. It works for genuine cat-related affection ("new kitten and I'm in love π»"), for cat-content posts where the cat is the object of admiration, and as a cat-themed alternative to the standard heart-eyes for people who use cat emojis as personal style.
The pet-parent usage is the most natural fit. Cat owners post photos of their pets with π» in the caption constantly β "look at her little paws π»," "my old man cat sleeping in his favorite spot π»." The emoji says "I love this cat" with maximum efficiency. Cat-account bios on Instagram lean on it heavily.
It also works as a substitute for π in chats where someone has adopted cat-emoji aesthetics as personal flair. "That outfit is everything π»" β same meaning as the standard heart-eyes, just with feline energy. It's a stylistic choice that signals taste and personality.
There's a fan-account register too. Stan Twitter and TikTok fandom communities use cat emojis as shorthand for being obsessed with an idol or celebrity. K-pop stans, anime fans, and music-fandom accounts all use π» to express devotion in cat-coded language. It pairs with bias photos and concert clips constantly.
The gender-coding is real but soft β π» reads as slightly more feminine than the standard π, partly because cats themselves are sometimes stereotyped as feminine-coded pets. That said, plenty of people of all genders use it freely, and the meaning is universal.
Apple draws π» with bright pink hearts where the eyes should be, a clear cat smile, and orange-yellow coloring. Google's version is similar with slightly different heart styling. Samsung's leans rounder. The smitten-cat quality is consistent.
Unicode 6.0 added π» in 2010 as part of the cat-face set. It's been a steady favorite among cat lovers and stan-culture users for over a decade.
Reach for π» for cat affection, alternative heart-eyes flair, stan-culture devotion, and anywhere you'd use π but want to add a little extra feline charm.
How to Use π» smiling cat with heart-eyes Emoji
“Looked at the new kitten and immediately π»”
“His new album just dropped and I am π»”
“Old cat tucked himself in like a burrito tonight π»”
Technical Details
| Unicode | U+1F63B |
| HTML Entity | 😻 |
| CSS Code | \1F63B |
| Shortcode | :smiling-cat-with-heart-eyes: |
| Keywords | animal, cat, eye, face, heart, heart-eyes, love, smile, smiling, with, eyes |
| Unicode Version | 0.6 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does π» mean?
The π» emoji means a cat in love β heart-eyes on a cat face. It's used for cat affection, stan-culture devotion, and as a feline alternative to the standard π heart-eyes for people who use cat emojis as personal style.
When should I use π» instead of π?
Use π» when you're talking about cats specifically, when you've adopted cat-emoji aesthetics as personal flair, or when you want to add an extra layer of cute energy to standard heart-eyes. Both mean adoration; π» adds feline charm.
