Copy, type, and use

Multiplication Symbol (×)

The multiplication symbol is ×. The multiplication sign × represents multiplication and is also used in dimensions, matrix sizes, and Cartesian products where the notation is defined by context.

Character
×
Unicode
U+00D7
HTML
×

Multiplication Symbol Copy and Paste

Select Copy to place × on your clipboard. Paste it with Ctrl+V on Windows, Command+V on Mac, or the Paste command on mobile.

Copy the multiplication symbol One click copies the exact Unicode character.
  1. 1
    Copy

    Press the button to copy ×.

  2. 2
    Place the cursor

    Open the message, document, form, or profile where you need it.

  3. 3
    Paste

    Use Ctrl+V, Command+V, or the mobile Paste command.

Mathematical expressionsTechnical documentsEducational materialPlain-text notation

What Is the Multiplication Symbol?

The multiplication sign × represents multiplication and is also used in dimensions, matrix sizes, and Cartesian products where the notation is defined by context.

Mathematical expressions

Technical documents

Educational material

Plain-text notation

Multiplication Symbol Variants and Related Forms

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How to Type the Multiplication Symbol

Choose your device or app to insert the multiplication symbol without copying it from another page.

Multiplication Symbol on Windows

In Microsoft Word, type 00D7 and press Alt + X. In other Windows apps, use Character Map or copy the character from this page.

Multiplication Symbol on Mac

Open Character Viewer with Control + Command + Space, then search for “multiplication sign.” Keyboard layouts and app support vary.

Multiplication Symbol on iPhone and iPad

Use the Copy button to copy ×, then paste it into the target app. For repeated use, save it as a text-replacement shortcut.

Multiplication Symbol on Android

Use the Copy button to copy ×, then paste it into the target app. Keyboard symbol menus vary by device and app.

Multiplication Symbol on Chromebook

Use the Copy button to copy ×, then press Ctrl+V. You can also use a supported character picker in the current app.

Multiplication Symbol on Microsoft Word

In Microsoft Word, type 00D7 and press Alt+X to convert the code to ×, or choose Insert > Symbol.

Multiplication Symbol on Google Docs

Paste × into Google Docs, or choose Insert > Special characters and search for multiplication sign.

Multiplication Symbol Unicode and HTML Codes

Use these values when you need the multiplication symbol in HTML, CSS, source code, or a character reference.

Unicode U+00D7
Unicode name MULTIPLICATION SIGN
HTML entity ×
HTML decimal ×
HTML hex ×
CSS escape 0D7

How to Use and Format the Multiplication Symbol

Use × as the exact Unicode character U+00D7 (MULTIPLICATION SIGN) when the document needs a copyable, searchable text symbol. The multiplication sign × represents multiplication and is also used in dimensions, matrix sizes, and Cartesian products where the notation is defined by context. The character should remain text rather than being redrawn with several characters or replaced by an image when exact encoding matters. Its visual form can change with the font, operating system, and text-versus-emoji presentation supported by the destination application.

Place the multiplication symbol in a sentence, equation, label, or reference that makes its role clear. For web content, use the literal UTF-8 character or a valid numeric or named character reference, and provide visible text or an accessible name when the symbol is used in a control. Before publishing, verify the code point, spacing, capitalization, and nearby units or labels against the relevant technical or editorial standard.

  • Use × between factors or dimensions when the publication style calls for the multiplication sign.

  • Use the operator required by the programming language when writing executable code.

  • Use the exact Unicode character × (U+00D7) rather than a visually similar substitute.

  • Use the literal UTF-8 character or a complete HTML character reference when publishing on the web.

  • Provide a visible label or accessible name when the symbol is used as an icon or control.

  • Test the character in the target font and application before publishing.

Multiplication Symbol Examples

  • 6 × 7 = 42
  • 10 × 20 cm
  • A 3 × 4 matrix
  • A × B
  • 2 × 5 = 10
  • Unicode: U+00D7 (MULTIPLICATION SIGN)
  • HTML decimal: ×
  • HTML hexadecimal: ×
  • CSS content: "\00D7"
  • Accessible label: ×

Common Multiplication Symbol Mistakes

  • Do not substitute the letter x when the multiplication sign × is required.
  • Do not confuse × with the cross product or Cartesian product unless the context defines that operation.
  • In programming languages, verify whether the operator must be an asterisk * instead of ×.
  • Do not replace × (U+00D7) with a lookalike character without checking its Unicode code point.
  • Do not assume the glyph will have exactly the same shape in every font or operating system.
  • Do not convert the character to an image when selectable and searchable Unicode text is required.
  • Do not use the symbol as the only accessible name of an interactive control.
  • In HTML, do not omit the semicolon from a numeric character reference.

More About the Multiplication Symbol

The multiplication symbol × is a Unicode text character rather than an image. Its code point is U+00D7, and Unicode identifies it as MULTIPLICATION SIGN. The multiplication sign × represents multiplication and is also used in dimensions, matrix sizes, and Cartesian products where the notation is defined by context. Because it remains encoded text, it can be selected, copied, searched, indexed, and pasted into apps that support the character. The exact glyph can vary with the active font and platform, so the Unicode value is the reliable way to verify that the intended character was used.

Supporting searches such as “multiplication dot symbol”, “multiplication symbol on keyboard”, “dot multiplication symbol”, “multiplication symbol dot”, “times symbol” generally describe related tasks: identifying the character, copying it, entering it on a keyboard, or understanding its documented use. This page keeps those small wording variations together instead of creating separate pages for the same symbol intent. Use the copy control for the fastest method, then consult the platform instructions for Word, Google Docs, Windows, macOS, iPhone, Android, and Chromebook.

The character-code section provides the Unicode value, HTML decimal and hexadecimal references, and a CSS escape. When the symbol conveys an action, category, hazard, legal status, or other important meaning, pair it with readable text rather than relying on the glyph alone. The formatting rules, examples, and common-mistake list below are based on the cited official references and are intended to help preserve the correct character across documents and websites.

Multiplication Symbol FAQ

What is the multiplication symbol?

The multiplication symbol is ×. The multiplication sign × represents multiplication and is also used in dimensions, matrix sizes, and Cartesian products where the notation is defined by context.

How do I copy and paste ×?

Use the Copy button next to ×, then paste it with Ctrl+V on Windows, Command+V on Mac, or the Paste command on mobile.

What is the Unicode for ×?

The Unicode code point is U+00D7, and the Unicode name is MULTIPLICATION SIGN.

How do I type ×?

Windows: In Microsoft Word, type 00D7 and press Alt + X. In other Windows apps, use Character Map or copy the character from this page. Mac: Open Character Viewer with Control + Command + Space, then search for “multiplication sign.” Keyboard layouts and app support vary.