EmojiFYI Stats Dashboard: Explore Emoji Data at a Glance

What Is the EmojiEmoji
Palabra japonesa (絵文字) que significa 'carácter imagen' — pequeños símbolos gráficos usados en la comunicación digital para expresar ideas, emociones y objetos.
Stats Dashboard?

Numbers tell stories, and emoji have plenty of numbers worth exploring. The EmojiFYI Stats Dashboard collects and visualizes key facts about the entire UnicodeUnicode
Estándar universal de codificación de caracteres que asigna un número único a cada carácter de todos los sistemas de escritura y conjuntos de símbolos, incluidos los emoji.
emoji set — all 3,953 emojis — in one interactive page. You can see how many emojis exist per category, how the emoji set has grown release by release, what share of emojis support skin tone modifiers, and much more.

Whether you are a developer planning for emoji rendering support, a designer curious about the breadth of available symbols, or simply an emoji enthusiast who wants to understand the landscape, the Stats Dashboard turns raw emoji data into readable charts and numbers.

Overview Cards

At the top of the dashboard, a row of summary cards gives you instant headline figures:

Card What It Shows
Total Emojis 3,953 fully-qualified Unicode emojis
Categories 10 top-level Unicode categories
Emoji Versions 17 releases (Emoji 1.0 through 17.0)
Languages Supported 15 languages for emoji names and keywords
Emojis with Skin Tones Count of emojis that accept modifier sequences
ZWJConector de ancho cero (ZWJ)
Carácter Unicode invisible (U+200D) utilizado para unir varios emoji en un único emoji compuesto, como la combinación de personas y objetos en emoji de profesiones.
Sequences
Count of multi-code-point joined sequences

These cards update if new emoji data is added to EmojiFYI, so they always reflect the current dataset.

Emojis by Category

The first major chart breaks down the full emoji set by Unicode category. The ten categories are:

  1. 😀 Smileys & Emotion
  2. 🧑 People & Body
  3. 🐶 Animals & Nature
  4. 🍕 Food & Drink
  5. 🌍 Travel & Places
  6. ⚽ Activities
  7. 💡 Objects
  8. 💯 Symbols
  9. 🚩 Flags
  10. 🔧 Component

The chart makes it immediately clear that Symbols and People & Body are among the largest categories, while Components (skin tone modifiers and other building blocks) form the smallest group. Flags occupy a unique middle ground — there are over 250 of them, covering every ISO 3166-1 country code plus a handful of subdivision flags like 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 England.

Clicking a category name in the chart takes you to that category's full listing page, where you can browse every emoji in it.

Growth by Emoji Version

The version history chart is one of the most fascinating views on the dashboard. It shows how many new emojis were added in each Unicode Emoji release, from Emoji 1.0 in 2015 through the current version.

A few highlights the chart makes visible at a glance:

  • Emoji 1.0 (2015) launched with the largest initial batch — over 1,200 emojis, covering most of the core set.
  • Emoji 4.0 (2016) was notable for introducing the full matrix of skin tone modifier sequences, which added hundreds of entries.
  • Emoji 11.0 (2018) was the first major expansion under the new annual release cadence and added 157 new emojis including 🥰, 🧁, and 🦔.
  • Emoji 15.1 (2023) introduced family ZWJ sequences with mixed skin tones, dramatically increasing the sequence count.

Hover over any bar or data point to see the exact count for that version, and click through to the Emoji Versions page for the full changelog.

Emoji Types Breakdown

Not every entry in the emoji set is a simple single character. The types chart shows the composition of the full dataset:

Type Approximate Count Description
Basic / Single ~1,400 One code point, one emoji
Skin Tone Sequences ~1,300 Base emoji + Fitzpatrick modifier
ZWJ Sequences ~600 Multiple emojis joined by U+200D
Flag Sequences ~258 Regional indicator pairs or tag sequences
Keycap Sequences 12 Digit/symbol + FE0F + U+20E3
Components ~10 Modifiers used as building blocks

This breakdown explains why emoji counts vary depending on how they are counted. A developer counting "emojis" might get different numbers depending on whether they count code points, grapheme clusters, or fully-qualified sequences. The Stats Dashboard uses the fully-qualified count — the same as Unicode's emoji-test.txtemoji-test.txt
El archivo oficial de Unicode que lista todas las secuencias emoji con su estado de calificación, puntos de código y nombres cortos del CLDR.
.

Platform Image Coverage

The platform coverage section shows how many emojis have vendor images available on EmojiFYI for each major platform:

  • 🍎 Apple
  • 🤖 Google
  • 📱 Samsung
  • 🪟 Microsoft
  • 🕊️ X (Twitter/Twemoji)
  • 💬 WhatsApp / Meta

Not every platform has rendered images for every Unicode emoji, particularly for the most recently added sequences. The coverage chart helps you see which platforms trail behind on image support for newer emojis — useful context when choosing which emoji to use across a mixed-platform audience.

For side-by-side rendering, use the Compare Tool after checking coverage stats here.

Skin Tone Coverage

The skin tone section shows which emoji categories have the broadest modifier support. People & Body emojis have near-complete skin tone coverage, while Animals & Nature and Objects have none — those emoji are not person-based, so modifiers do not apply.

The chart breaks down: - Total emojis that accept skin tone modifiers - Number of skin tone variants per supported base - Which Unicode version each modifier batch was introduced in

This is especially useful for developers building inclusive applications who want to ensure they handle all skin tone sequences in their emoji input handling and storage.

Using Stats as a Research Starting Point

The dashboard is designed to spark curiosity and point you toward deeper exploration. Here are a few ways to use it:

Discover Under-Explored Categories

If the chart shows a category you rarely use — say, Activities ⚽ or Flags 🚩 — click through to browse every emoji in it. You might find emojis you did not know existed: 🪃 Boomerang, 🏋️ Person Lifting Weights, or 🎯 Bullseye are all easy to overlook.

Understand Version Support Before Using New Emojis

Before using a freshly added emoji (from Emoji 15.0 or 16.0, for example), check how many platforms have rendered it yet. If platform image coverage is low, your audience may see a missing glyph or a plain square instead of the intended emoji.

Benchmark Rendering Completeness

For developers building apps that display user-supplied emoji, the type breakdown informs test planning. If your app only tests single-code-point emojis, you are missing the ~1,300 skin tone sequences, ~600 ZWJ sequences, and all the flag sequences. The Stats Dashboard quantifies exactly what you need to cover.

Refreshing and Exporting Data

The dashboard reflects the current state of EmojiFYI's database. When new Unicode emoji versions are adopted, the numbers update automatically. For raw data access — say, to run your own analysis — the EmojiFYI API provides JSON endpoints for every emoji, category, and version in the dataset.

Explore More on EmojiFYI

After spending time with the Stats Dashboard, dig deeper with these related tools:

  • Compare Tool — see how specific emojis render across the platforms highlighted in the stats
  • Sequence Analyzer — examine the internal structure of ZWJ sequences and skin tone variants counted in the dashboard
  • Emoji Keyboard — browse by category, which maps directly to the categories shown in the stats charts
  • EmojiFYI API — access the raw data behind the dashboard programmatically

Herramientas relacionadas

🔀 Comparar plataformas Comparar plataformas
Compara cómo se muestran los emojis en Apple, Google, Samsung, Microsoft y más. Ve las diferencias visuales en paralelo.
⌨️ Teclado de emojis Teclado de emojis
Explora y copia cualquiera de los 3.953 emojis organizados por categoría. Funciona en cualquier navegador, sin instalación.
🔍 Analizador de secuencias Analizador de secuencias
Decodifica secuencias ZWJ, modificadores de tono de piel, secuencias de teclas y pares de banderas en sus componentes individuales.
📊 Estadísticas de emojis Estadísticas de emojis
Explora estadísticas sobre el conjunto de emojis Unicode — distribución por categoría, crecimiento por versión y desglose por tipo.

Términos del glosario

Conector de ancho cero (ZWJ) Conector de ancho cero (ZWJ)
Carácter Unicode invisible (U+200D) utilizado para unir varios emoji en un único emoji compuesto, como la combinación de personas y objetos en emoji de profesiones.
Emoji Emoji
Palabra japonesa (絵文字) que significa 'carácter imagen' — pequeños símbolos gráficos usados en la comunicación digital para expresar ideas, emociones y objetos.
emoji-test.txt emoji-test.txt
El archivo oficial de Unicode que lista todas las secuencias emoji con su estado de calificación, puntos de código y nombres cortos del CLDR.
Indicador regional (RI) Indicador regional (RI)
Letras Unicode emparejadas (U+1F1E6 a U+1F1FF) que forman emoji de banderas de países al combinarse según los códigos ISO 3166-1 alpha-2.
Modificador de tono de piel Modificador de tono de piel
Cinco caracteres modificadores Unicode basados en la escala Fitzpatrick que cambian el color de piel de los emoji humanos (U+1F3FB a U+1F3FF).
Punto de código Punto de código
Valor numérico único asignado a cada carácter en el estándar Unicode, escrito en el formato U+XXXX (por ejemplo, U+1F600 para 😀).
Twemoji Twemoji
Conjunto de emoji de código abierto creado originalmente por Twitter, que proporciona recursos emoji en formato SVG y PNG utilizables en cualquier proyecto.
Unicode Unicode
Estándar universal de codificación de caracteres que asigna un número único a cada carácter de todos los sistemas de escritura y conjuntos de símbolos, incluidos los emoji.
Versión emoji Versión emoji
La versión de lanzamiento en la que se introdujo por primera vez un emoji, siguiendo un ciclo de publicación anual desde Emoji 4.0 (2016).

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