Circled Dollar Sign With Overlaid Backslash Letter
A circled dollar sign with an overlaid backslash used as a distinct symbol for marked or restricted value.
U+1F10F
🄏 is an enclosed, circled character that combines a dollar sign with a backslash overlay. It’s useful when you need a compact, recognizable marker in text or UI. Copy it directly or use the included code points in your app or web page.
Circled Dollar Sign With Overlaid Backslash Letter Meaning
🄏 is “CIRCLED DOLLAR SIGN WITH OVERLAID BACKSLASH” (Unicode U+1F10F). Visually, it pairs the dollar sign—often associated with money or pricing—with a backslash overlay, which can suggest restriction, rejection, prohibition, or a special status. Because it’s an enclosed symbol rather than a standard punctuation mark, its meaning is often context-dependent: designers and writers may use it as a decorative icon for “restricted pricing,” “blocked funds,” “private/hidden value,” or “not available/denied cost” indicators. In most cases, it functions as a clear visual tag rather than a universally fixed ideogram.
Common uses
- •UI labeling for restricted or unavailable pricing (e.g., “price hidden/blocked”)
- •Watermarks or badges in mockups to mark sensitive or monetized content
- •Status indicators in dashboards to denote exceptions related to cost or funds
- •Design elements in posters or infographics where “dollar + restriction” is needed
- •Documentation or tickets to flag budget-related items as disallowed or pending
Examples
🄏 Circled Dollar Sign with Overlaid Backslash
- 🄏“Pricing: 🄏 (available after approval).”
- 🄏“Access denied for billing edits: 🄏.”
- 🄏“Transaction flagged 🄏—review required.”
- 🄏“This item’s cost is hidden 🄏.”
- 🄏“Funds not eligible 🄏.”
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1F10F | |
| HTML Entity | 🄏 | |
| HTML Code | 🄏 | |
| CSS | \1F10F |
FAQ
What is the Unicode name of 🄏?
Its Unicode name is “CIRCLED DOLLAR SIGN WITH OVERLAID BACKSLASH”.
What are the code points for this symbol?
Unicode code point: U+1F10F. HTML entity: 🄏. CSS escape: \\1F10F. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F10F}.
What does the overlaid backslash mean?
The backslash overlay often visually suggests restriction or denial; however, the exact meaning depends on your context (for example, “blocked pricing” in UI).
How can I use it on a website or in an app?
You can paste the character directly, or use the provided escapes (HTML/CSS/JavaScript) to ensure consistent rendering where supported.