Couple Kaomoji
Copy couple kaomoji, Japanese two-person text faces, hugs, kisses, and wedding symbols for chats, captions, and love notes.
Popular couple kaomoji
Short, readable faces are usually the best fit for bios, usernames, and chat replies.
Couple Kaomoji copy and paste
192 text faces shown in All.
Couple Kaomoji ASCII art
Multi-line text art. Paste into a monospace field so the alignment survives.
Anniversary messages
A two-face kaomoji next to "happy anniversary" reads as a shared moment rather than a single sender talking about the couple.
Instagram captions
Couple photo dumps and relationship posts use hug and heart faces as a caption sign-off instead of repeating the same heart emoji.
Discord and group chats
Two-face kaomoji react to a friend's relationship news or a couple's screenshot faster than typing out a reply.
Wedding and engagement posts
The ring and altar emoji combos and hug faces suit engagement announcements and wedding thank-you notes.
How to use couple kaomoji
Anniversary and love texts
- Pair a plain two-face kaomoji with the date or a short line, so the face reads as decoration rather than the whole message
- A heart placed between two plain faces works well at the end of a sincere message since the heart sits between them rather than after
- Save the longest decorated combos for a card or bio instead of a text message, where they can get cut off
Relationship captions
- Close a couple photo caption with a short face instead of stacking multiple heart emoji
- The Unicode couple emoji reads clearly even at small caption sizes since it renders as a single glyph
- Use a minimal heart-plus-heart sign-off when the caption itself is already doing the talking
Hugging someone in chat
- An arm-reaching face reads as one person reaching toward the other, useful for comforting a friend or partner
- A sparkle-dressed hugging emoji is a softer, less literal hug for casual replies
- Keep hug faces short in fast-moving chats; the longer ones read better as a single reply than mid-conversation
Engagement and wedding posts
- The ring and veil combo doubles as a caption opener for an engagement announcement
- Pair it with a plain content face rather than another decorated one to avoid visual clutter
- These combos are long, so they suit a caption or bio more than a text message
Couple Kaomoji message templates
Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.
Couple Kaomoji meanings
( ˘ ᵕ˘(˘ᵕ ˘ )
Two soft, closed-eye faces leaning toward each other. The most neutral couple kaomoji here, safe for captions, texts, and comments alike.
(ɔˆ ³(ˆᴗˆc)
Two faces puckered toward a shared kiss mark in the middle. Reads as playful affection rather than anything overly sentimental.
( . ̫.)♥(.ˬ. )
A heart placed directly between two plain faces. Works as a straightforward "we're together" marker without extra decoration.
( ˶˘ ³˘(ˊᗜˋ*)!♡
One relaxed face and one wide grin joined by a heart. The mismatched expressions suit banter between partners rather than a formal pairing.
ʕ•͓͡•ʔ❤︎ʕ•̫͡•ʔ᪲
Two bear-shaped faces with a heart between them. The rounded ʕʔ brackets read as ears, so this lands softer and cuter than the bracket-face couples.
웃❤유
Two Korean-alphabet stick figures with a heart in the middle. Because it uses whole glyphs as people rather than punctuation faces, it stays legible even shrunk down in a username.
(♡ ᐛ )人( ᐛ ♡)
Two open-mouth faces joined by the kanji 人, meaning "person," used here as a visual link between the pair rather than for its meaning.
👩❤️👨
The Unicode couple-with-heart sequence, rendered as a single emoji rather than a text kaomoji. Use it where you want a picture instead of punctuation.
👩❤️💋👨
The kiss variant of the couple emoji sequence. Reads as more romantic than the plain heart couple and suits anniversary or proposal posts.
⋆.˚🫂༘⋆
A hugging-people emoji dressed with sparkle accents. Softer and less literal than a bracket face, good for a caption sign-off.
( ^◡^)っ✂╰⋃╯
One face reaching out with an arm toward a heart shape. The っ arm makes this read as a hug in progress rather than a static pairing.
(っ˘з(˘⌣˘ )
A single face with an extended arm nudging into a second face's space. Reads as one partner leaning in for a kiss.
( • )( • )ԅ(‾⌣‾ԅ)
Two plain eyes above a third grinning face with two curled arms. An odd, slightly comic couple face better suited to jokes than sincerity.
couple, 💍👰🏻🤵🏻🕊️𓍢ִ໋🌷͙֒,( ๑‾̀◡‾́)(‾̀◡‾́ ๑)
A wedding-themed combo pairing a ring, veil, tuxedo, and dove emoji with two content faces. Built for engagement and wedding announcements rather than everyday chat.
Related kaomoji
Keep browsing nearby text face collections.
Couple Kaomoji — background
Kaomoji are read upright, emoticons sideways
Western emoticons such as :-) developed on early ASCII systems where tilting your head was the cheapest way to see a face. Japanese users had access to a far larger character set through JIS encodings, so their faces never needed rotating. Couple kaomoji push that further, drawing two full faces side by side rather than tilting a single mouth.
The brackets are borrowed from other alphabets
Characters that look purpose-built for couple faces are usually loaned. ʕʔ come from a phonetic symbol set repurposed as bear ears, ᐢ is Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, and 人 is the Chinese and Japanese character for "person," used here purely as a visual joiner rather than for its meaning.
Copying is the whole distribution mechanism
Kaomoji spread with no central registry, no approval body, and no version numbers, unlike emoji which need a Unicode proposal. A couple face becomes standard purely because enough people copied it, which is why so many near-identical two-face variants circulate at once.
Two-face kaomoji are a distinct sub-genre
Most kaomoji categories draw a single expression. Couple kaomoji instead chain two complete faces together with a connector, whether that is a heart, an arm made of っ or 爻, or a kanji. That structural difference is what separates a couple face from a cute or happy face with a heart added on.
Rare characters are why some faces break
A kaomoji renders only if the reader's device ships a font covering every character in it. Older Android builds omit large parts of Unicode, so the most decorated couple combos can collapse into empty boxes. Plainer faces built from common punctuation survive on far more devices.
What is couple kaomoji?
Couple kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces that show two people together, usually two bracket faces joined by a heart, arm, or kanji. Like all kaomoji, they are plain Unicode text, not images, so they paste and keep their shape anywhere text is supported.
How do I copy couple kaomoji?
Tap any face on this page to copy it to your clipboard as plain text. Paste it into a chat, caption, or comment the same way you would paste a word.
What is the difference between couple kaomoji and the emoji couple symbol?
The Unicode couple emoji, such as the heart-linked couple sequence, renders as a small picture drawn by the device. Couple kaomoji are built from ordinary punctuation and letters, so they render identically as text everywhere and can be edited or combined freely.
Do couple kaomoji work on Discord, Instagram, and TikTok?
Yes. Every face on this page is plain Unicode text, so it works anywhere text is accepted. A few heavily decorated faces use rarer characters that some older Android keyboards render as boxes.
Which couple kaomoji are best for a relationship Instagram caption?
Short, clean ones read best under a photo. Save the longer decorated combos for a bio or a standalone post rather than a caption.
Are there couple kaomoji for hugging?
Yes. Faces built with an arm glyph such as っ or 爻, or the hugging-people emoji, read as a hug rather than a static pairing.
Are there couple kaomoji for kissing?
A small number use the kiss emoji sequence directly. Text-only kiss faces are rarer on this page than hug and heart faces, since a kiss is harder to draw from punctuation alone.
Why do some couple kaomoji show up as boxes or missing characters?
That happens when the reader's device has no font covering a rare character in the face. It is a display gap on their end, not a broken copy. Simpler faces avoid the problem entirely.
Can I use couple kaomoji for a wedding or engagement post?
Yes. The ring, veil, and tuxedo emoji combos on this page were built for exactly that, and pair well with a plain content face rather than a decorated one.
How many couple kaomoji are on this page?
There are 200 faces here, grouped into two-face couples, hugs, kisses and weddings, hearts, emoji combos, ascii art, and aesthetic accents so you can jump to the style you need.