free-symbols

South East Triangle-headed Arrow To Bar Symbol

A southeast-pointing arrow with a triangle head leading to a bar, useful for directional and UI indicators.

U+2B78

⭸ is a directional arrow character from the Arrows category. Its name reflects the shape: a triangle-headed arrow pointing to the southeast toward a bar.

South East Triangle-headed Arrow To Bar Symbol Meaning

⭸ (U+2B78) is typically used to show direction or movement toward a specific target or state. Because the arrow points southeast and ends at a bar, it visually suggests “proceed toward,” “move to,” or “connect into” a next step. In practice, designers and writers often use it as a compact symbol in diagrams, flow text, feature lists, or UI labels where a standard word like “go” or “next” would be too verbose. It can also function as a decorative marker to guide attention, such as indicating where text should continue or where an item links to.

Common uses

  • Indicating a next step in a process or workflow description
  • Labeling navigation or flow direction in diagrams and infographics
  • Marking continuation from one section to another in documentation
  • Decorating bullet points to imply “proceed to” or “move toward”
  • Using as a UI glyph alongside buttons or links to suggest progression

Examples

⭸ South East Triangle-Headed Arrow To Bar

  • Step 1: Review requirements ⭸ Step 2: Start implementation
  • Continue reading ⭸ Next section: Deployment
  • Files → export queue ⭸ ready for upload
  • From Draft ⭸ to Review
  • Select a plan ⭸ proceed to checkout

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+2B78
HTML Entity⭸
HTML Code⭸
CSS\2B78

FAQ

What does ⭸ mean?

It’s a southeast-pointing triangle-headed arrow to a bar, commonly used to show direction toward a next step, target, or continuation.

How do I copy ⭸ for use in my text?

Select the symbol on this page (⭸) and copy/paste it into your document, editor, or design tool.

What is the Unicode code point for ⭸?

The Unicode code point is U+2B78.

Does ⭸ work in HTML and code editors?

Yes. You can use the HTML entity ⭸ or the CSS escape \\2B78 and JavaScript escape \\u{2B78} where supported.