Morse code translator converts plain text into Morse code sequences and decodes Morse back into readable letters. Type your message or paste a dot-and-dash sequence and get the result instantly in your browser. This free, no-signup tool supports the international Morse alphabet and is useful for learning, games, signaling simulations, and encoding short messages.
Morse Code Converter is a free browser-based tool that translates text to Morse code and Morse code back to text. Morse code represents each letter and digit as a sequence of dots and dashes (short and long signals). Originally developed for electrical telegraphy in the 1830s and 1840s, Morse code is still used in amateur (ham) radio communications, aviation navigation beacons, and military contexts, and it remains a part of amateur radio licensing exams. The tool converts Latin letters A-Z, digits 0-9, and common punctuation between text and Morse code representations. Dots are represented as periods and dashes as hyphens in the text output. The tool runs entirely in the browser with no data sent to a server. No account or installation is required.
Morse Code Converter is used in educational, hobbyist, and practical contexts. For students preparing for amateur radio licensing exams, the tool provides quick translation for practice sessions, helping build familiarity with common letter patterns and word encodings. For writers and content creators, it is used to generate accurate Morse code representations for inclusion in fiction, games, puzzle design, and creative projects. For hobbyists building Morse code projects with microcontrollers or light signaling, the converter provides a quick reference without needing to consult a code chart manually. The international Morse code standard (ITU-R M.1677) defines the dot-dash sequences for the Latin alphabet, digits, and common punctuation marks. The tool follows this standard. Each character is separated by a short pause (represented in the text output as a space between letter codes) and each word is separated by a longer pause (represented as a slash or multiple spaces). The most recognizable Morse code sequence, SOS (... --- ...), was adopted as the international distress signal because it is easy to transmit without error due to its simple and distinct pattern. The tool handles both the encoding direction (text to Morse) and decoding direction (Morse to text), making it useful for both creating and reading Morse code content. It runs free in the browser without installation.