When sentence case is the better choice
Sentence case is common in product interfaces, button labels, support articles, documentation, internal tools, and email subject lines. It feels more conversational and often matches modern UX-writing standards better than title case.
If your team prefers plain-language copy or you are formatting body-style headings rather than display headlines, sentence case usually feels more natural.
Sentence case vs. title case
The main difference is visual emphasis. Title case capitalizes major words across the line, while sentence case keeps most words lowercase and capitalizes only the first word and proper nouns where appropriate.
That lower-contrast style can improve readability in interfaces and support content where clarity matters more than headline impact.
Practical uses for this converter
Use this page to normalize imported text, clean up copied headings, rewrite inconsistent interface labels, or prepare support content that should sound calm and direct.
It is also handy when titles arrive in all caps or mixed capitalization from spreadsheets, documents, or client drafts.
Examples
UI heading
Uncapped version
HOW TO CHANGE YOUR ACCOUNT PASSWORD
Capsed version
How to change your account password
Help article
Uncapped version
Resetting Notification Settings on Mobile
Capsed version
Resetting notification settings on mobile
Email subject
Uncapped version
YOUR WEEKLY PERFORMANCE REPORT IS READY
Capsed version
Your weekly performance report is ready
Frequently asked questions
What is sentence case?
Sentence case capitalizes the first word of a sentence and keeps most remaining words lowercase unless they are proper nouns or require capitalization for another reason.
Is sentence case better for UI and product copy?
Often yes. Many product teams prefer sentence case because it feels more natural and less shouty than title case for buttons, labels, and support content.
Can I switch from sentence case to title case on the same site?
Yes. Sentence case works well for interface and instructional copy, while title case is still useful for editorial headlines and display-style titles.
Explore more styles
Compare this result with related capitalization pages or read the full rules guide for more detail on how the converter behaves.