Morse Code, Braille & NATO Alphabet — The Communication Tools
Translate text to Morse code, Braille, or the NATO phonetic alphabet — fun tools with real-world uses.
Some ways of communicating are old, some are niche, and some are accessibility essentials. These three tools let you translate between normal text and some of the most interesting alternative communication formats.
Morse Code
You're trying to spell out a confirmation code over a scratchy phone line and half your words are getting lost in the noise. Time to switch to Morse code — or at least the NATO phonetic alphabet, but let's talk about Morse first.
The Morse code converter turns regular text into dots and dashes. It's not just novelty either. Amateur radio operators still use Morse code constantly, and if you're getting into that hobby, you need a way to practice and understand what you're receiving. You can also use it to learn the patterns — tap out your name in Morse and notice how some letters sound, which helps you recognize them when you hear them.
It's also genuinely cool to be able to flash out a message using a flashlight or taps on a table. Not practical for daily use, obviously, but for camping with friends or impressing people at parties, it's a fun skill.
Braille
Braille is far more than novelty. It's essential accessibility infrastructure. The Braille converter translates text to Braille characters, and it's incredibly useful if you're making documents that need to be accessible or if you're learning Braille yourself.
You might be printing materials for a school, library, or public space where some readers will be using Braille. You might be creating labels or signs. Or you might just be curious about how Braille works and want to see what your name looks like in Braille script. The tool handles it instantly, and accurate Braille representation matters — it's not just random dots.
NATO Phonetic Alphabet
This is the one you actually use all the time. You're on the phone with customer support trying to spell out your username: "A as in Apple, B as in Bravo..." wait, no, that's not right. It's "Alpha, Bravo, Charlie."
The NATO phonetic alphabet converter is your reference. Instead of making up on-the-spot descriptions (A as in "uh..." that thing...), you use the official NATO phonetic alphabet. You type "ABC" and it gives you "Alpha Bravo Charlie." It's precise, universally recognized, and actually helps people understand you.
It's useful way more often than you'd think. You're reading off a license plate over the phone. You're spelling someone's unusual name to a service representative. You're communicating in a noisy environment and need to make sure every character gets through clearly. The tool is always there when you need it.
All three of these tools work in your browser with no login required. Your communications stay between you and your device — nothing gets sent anywhere else. Whether you're tinkering with Morse, creating accessible documents, or just trying to spell something clearly over the phone, these tools have got you covered.