Not on any standard key — here’s the fastest method on every platform
The cent sign ¢ (Unicode U+00A2) is one of those characters that used to be on typewriter keyboards and somehow got left off modern ones.
You need it for prices under a dollar, financial documents, retail copy, and anywhere you’re writing about small monetary amounts.
Every platform has a way to type it, and on most of them the method is faster than hunting through a character map once you know it.
When to Use ¢ vs. $0.xx
Both are correct for expressing amounts under a dollar — 99¢ and $0.99 are equivalent. The cent sign is more compact and works well in retail contexts, price lists, advertising copy, and informal financial writing. Formal financial documents typically use the dollar format with decimal notation instead.
The cent sign follows the number it modifies — 99¢, not ¢99. This is the opposite of the dollar sign which precedes the amount.
Windows
Method 1: Alt Code
Hold Alt and type 0162 on the numeric keypad. Release Alt and ¢ appears.
- Num Lock must be on
- Use the numeric keypad only — not the number row
- Doesn’t work on laptops without a dedicated numpad
Method 2: Character Map
Search for Character Map in the Start menu. Find ¢ in the Latin-1 Supplement block, copy it, and paste. Works on any Windows machine including those without a numpad.
Method 3: System-Wide Text Expansion
Use PhraseExpress, AutoHotkey, or Espanso to map a trigger like \c or cc to ¢ system-wide. Works in every application without remembering an Alt code.
A simple AutoHotkey script:
::\c::¢
Mac
Method 1: Keyboard Shortcut
Press Option + 4 to type ¢ instantly.
This is the method to remember on Mac. The 4 key already has the dollar sign on Shift + 4 — Option + 4 gives you the related cent sign. Logical, easy to remember, works in every application with no setup.
Method 2: Character Viewer
Press Control + Command + Space to open the Character Viewer. Search “cent” and double-click ¢ to insert.
Method 3: Text Replacement
Go to System Settings → Keyboard → Text Replacements and map a trigger like \c or cc to ¢. Works system-wide across every Mac app.
iPhone and iPad
Method 1: Long Press the Dollar Sign Key
Tap and hold the $ key on the iOS keyboard — accessible after tapping ?123 to switch to numbers and symbols. A popup appears showing currency variants including ¢. Slide to it and release.
This is the built-in iOS method and requires no setup. It works in every text field across iOS and is the most intuitive approach since ¢ is grouped with other currency symbols on long press.
Method 2: Text Replacement
Go to Settings → General → Keyboard → Text Replacement. Add ¢ as the phrase and a trigger like \c or cent as the shortcut. Auto-expands in any app after setup.
Method 3: Currency Symbols Page
Tap ?123 to switch to numbers and symbols. On some iOS keyboard configurations ¢ appears directly on the symbols page alongside other currency characters.
Android
Method 1: Long Press the Dollar Sign Key
On Gboard and most Android keyboards, tap and hold the $ key in the symbols view (?123). A popup shows currency variants including ¢. Slide to it and release.
This works on most Android keyboards without any setup and mirrors the iOS experience.
Method 2: Gboard Symbol Search
In Gboard, tap the G logo and use the search function. Type “cent” and ¢ appears as an insertable option. Tap to insert.
Method 3: Currency Symbols
Tap ?123 to reach the symbols keyboard. Look for ¢ directly on the symbols page — some Android keyboard versions include it without needing a long press.
Chromebook
Method 1: Unicode Input
Press Ctrl + Shift + U, type 00a2, then press Enter or Space. ¢ appears at your cursor immediately.
Method 2: Special Characters Picker
Press Search + Shift + Space to open the emoji and special characters panel. Search “cent” and select the ¢ symbol.
Linux
Method 1: Unicode Input
Press Ctrl + Shift + U, type 00a2, then press Enter. Works consistently across most Linux distributions.
Method 2: Compose Key
With a Compose key configured, the sequence is Compose + c + / (Compose, c, forward slash) or Compose + / + c to produce ¢ on many configurations.
Method 3: US International Keyboard
On the US International keyboard layout, Right Alt + C produces ¢ on some configurations. Check your specific layout settings.
Microsoft Word (Any Platform)
Method 1: Alt + X
Type 00A2 then immediately press Alt + X. Word converts the Unicode code point to ¢ instantly.
Method 2: Insert Symbol With AutoCorrect
Go to Insert → Symbol → More Symbols. Find ¢ in the Latin-1 Supplement character set or search by name. Click AutoCorrect and set a trigger like \c or (c) that Word automatically converts as you type.
Method 3: Alt Code
Hold Alt and type 0162 on the numpad — same as the standard Windows method.
Google Docs
Option + 4 on Mac works inside Google Docs exactly as it does everywhere else. The Alt + 0162 numpad code works on Windows inside Docs.
Go to Insert → Special Characters, search “cent sign,” and click to insert for occasional use. For regular writing involving cent amounts, an OS-level text replacement is more practical.
Related Currency Symbols
Since you’re here, other currency symbols that follow similar methods:
| Symbol | Name | Windows | Mac | Unicode |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ¢ | Cent | Alt + 0162 | Option + 4 | 00A2 |
| £ | Pound | Alt + 0163 | Option + 3 | 00A3 |
| € | Euro | Alt + 0128 | Option + Shift + 2 | 20AC |
| ¥ | Yen / Yuan | Alt + 0165 | Option + Y | 00A5 |
| ₩ | Won | Character Map | Character Viewer | 20A9 |
| ₹ | Rupee | Character Map | Character Viewer | 20B9 |
On mobile, long pressing the $ key reveals most of these currency symbols in a single popup — making it the fastest way to access any currency symbol on iPhone or Android without remembering platform-specific shortcuts.
Quick Reference Table
| Platform | Fastest Method | Shortcut |
|---|---|---|
| Windows | Alt code (numpad) | Alt + 0162 |
| Mac | Keyboard shortcut | Option + 4 |
| iPhone / iPad | Long press $ key | Hold $, slide to ¢ |
| Android | Long press $ key | Hold $, slide to ¢ |
| Chromebook | Unicode input | Ctrl + Shift + U, 00a2 |
| Linux | Unicode input | Ctrl + Shift + U, 00a2 |
| Microsoft Word | Code conversion | Type 00A2 then Alt + X |
The Bottom Line
On Mac, Option + 4 is the easiest currency shortcut on the platform — memorable because the dollar sign is already on Shift + 4, making Option + 4 its logical neighbor. On mobile, the long press on the dollar sign key groups ¢ with other currency symbols exactly where you’d expect to find it. On Windows, Alt + 0162 covers most situations reliably with a numpad.
For anyone writing retail copy, financial documents, or price lists regularly, a text expander shortcut is worth the two minutes to set up — ¢ should be no harder to reach than any letter.
Option + 4 on Mac. Alt + 0162 on Windows. Long press $ on mobile. The cent sign is one shortcut away on every platform — you just have to know which one.
Meet Ry, “TechGuru,” a 36-year-old technology enthusiast with a deep passion for tech innovations. With extensive experience, he specializes in gaming hardware and software, and has expertise in gadgets, custom PCs, and audio.
Besides writing about tech and reviewing new products, he enjoys traveling, hiking, and photography. Committed to keeping up with the latest industry trends, he aims to guide readers in making informed tech decisions.