free-symbols
🢥

Rightwards Right-shaded White Arrow Symbol

A right-pointing arrow with a shaded styling used to suggest movement, direction, or emphasis.

U+1F8A5

🢥 (U+1F8A5) is a specialized arrow symbol pointing to the right. It’s often used where you want a directional cue with a slightly “editorial” or diagram-like look. This page helps you copy it and use it consistently.

Rightwards Right-shaded White Arrow Symbol Meaning

🢥 is a rightwards arrow that visually emphasizes motion or a directional transition toward the right. The “right-shaded” and “white” styling makes it distinct from plain arrows, so it can feel more structured—useful in UI mockups, diagrams, and instructional text. In practice, it commonly functions as a visual shorthand for steps that proceed rightward (e.g., moving to the next item or moving along a timeline). Because the symbol is a directional arrow, its meaning is usually straightforward in context: “go right,” “move to the next,” or “proceed.”

Common uses

  • Indicating the next step in a process flow that moves to the right
  • Labeling navigation or carousel direction (e.g., “swipe right” / “next” cues)
  • Marking transitions in diagrams or infographics
  • Decorating headings or callouts to draw attention to forward-right movement
  • Using as a visual separator in instructions or checklists

Examples

🢥 Rightwards Right-Shaded White Arrow

  • 🢥Select the option on the right 🢥
  • 🢥Step 2 🢥 Step 3
  • 🢥Move forward → then proceed 🢥
  • 🢥Swipe right to continue 🢥
  • 🢥From A to B (rightward) 🢥

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F8A5
HTML Entity🢥
HTML Code🢥
CSS\1F8A5

FAQ

What is the Unicode for 🢥?

🢥 is U+1F8A5 (unicode_name: RIGHTWARDS RIGHT-SHADED WHITE ARROW).

How can I copy 🢥?

Copy the character directly from this page. For code, you can use the HTML entity 🢥 or CSS/JS escapes provided on the symbol page.

What does the right-shaded style change?

It makes the arrow visually distinct from a plain arrow, which can help it stand out in UI elements, diagrams, and instructional layouts.

Will it display on all devices?

Unicode symbols can vary by platform support. If you don’t see it, consider using a fallback like a standard right arrow (→) in your design.