Japanese “monthly amount” button Emoji
🈷️ is a Japanese “monthly amount” button symbol for monthly pricing, billing, or quotas.
U+1F237 U+FE0F
🈷️ is a Unicode emoji-style symbol called the Japanese “monthly amount” button. It’s commonly used to label monthly fees, subscriptions, or recurring amounts. If you need a clear UI icon, this symbol can work as a compact text replacement.
Japanese “monthly amount” button Emoji Meaning
🈷️ is the Unicode character named “JAPANESE ‘MONTHLY AMOUNT’ BUTTON” (code point U+1F237 U+FE0F). It visually communicates the idea of a monthly amount in a button-like style. In practice, people use it when a value is billed or counted per month, such as monthly pricing, membership fees, subscription cost, or a recurring quota. Because it’s a recognizable Japanese UI sign, it can help make interfaces feel localized without needing extra text—especially when pairing it with a number (e.g., “¥10,000” or “$29”).
Common uses
- •Monthly subscription pricing labels in apps or websites
- •Billing form fields (e.g., “Monthly Amount” with a currency value)
- •UI badges for recurring charges or plans
- •Invoice and payment screens indicating monthly totals
- •Multilingual dashboards where a compact icon reduces text
Examples
🈷️ Japanese “Monthly Amount” Button
- 🈷️Monthly Amount: 🈷️ ¥9,800
- 🈷️Plan price (per month): 🈷️ $29.00
- 🈷️Recurring charge: 🈷️ billed monthly
- 🈷️Total for this month: 🈷️ 120 points
- 🈷️Membership fee: 🈷️ ¥2,500
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F237 U+FE0F | |
| HTML Entity | 🈷 | |
| HTML Code | 🈷 | |
| CSS | \1F237 |
FAQ
What does 🈷️ mean?
🈷️ is a Japanese “monthly amount” button symbol, used to indicate a value is per month (like fees or pricing).
How do I copy the correct character?
Copy the symbol shown on this page: 🈷️. It corresponds to Unicode code point U+1F237 U+FE0F.
Where is 🈷️ useful in design?
It works well as a compact label for UI text like “monthly price,” “monthly fee,” or “recurring amount” next to a number.
Will it look the same everywhere?
Emoji-style rendering can vary by platform and font, but the underlying character is the same (U+1F237 U+FE0F).