house Emoji
The house emoji 🏠 represents a home, building, or place to live and can be used for location and real-estate topics.
U+1F3E0
The 🏠 house emoji is a simple way to show “home” or “where something is located.” It’s popular in messages about moving, real estate, and neighborhood life. Below you’ll find meaning, copy options, and quick usage ideas.
house Emoji Meaning
The 🏠 (HOUSE, U+1F3E0) emoji typically represents a house or home—any residential building where people live. It’s commonly used in everyday writing to refer to housing, residence, moving, or “at home” themes. In marketing and informational contexts, it can indicate real estate, property listings, rent or buy discussions, and general home-related services. Because it visually suggests a physical place, it also works well for location tagging in social posts (e.g., “our home,” “new neighborhood,” or “coming to your area”). In design, it’s frequently used alongside address, map, or lifestyle imagery.
Common uses
- •Real estate and property listings (homes for sale or rent)
- •Move-in updates and “new home” announcements
- •Location or address tags in posts and messages
- •Home services promotions (repairs, cleaning, renovations)
- •Lifestyle and community content (neighborhood, family, “at home”)
Examples
🏠 House Symbol (Copy & Unicode Details)
- 🏠Our new 🏠 is finally ready!
- 🏠DM for listings—3 bed, 2 bath 🏠 for rent.
- 🏠Heading to your area today 🏠
- 🏠Home repair appointment: plumbing and fixes 🏠
- 🏠Weekend plan: visiting friends’ 🏠
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F3E0 | |
| HTML Entity | 🏠 | |
| HTML Code | 🏠 | |
| CSS | \1F3E0 |
FAQ
What is the Unicode for the house emoji 🏠?
The house emoji 🏠 is Unicode U+1F3E0.
How do I type or reference 🏠 in code?
You can use the HTML entity 🏠 or CSS escape \\1F3E0. For JavaScript, use \\u{1F3E0}.
What does 🏠 usually mean?
It most often means a house or home—typically someone’s residence or a real-estate/property context.
Is 🏠 appropriate for location or address messages?
Yes. It’s commonly used as a friendly location cue for “at home,” “our place,” or “near this address.”