How to Use the Arabic Numerals Converter
Enter a number, date, price, decimal, or other number-only value, then choose the direction of conversion. The default mode changes Western digits such as 123 into Eastern Arabic numerals such as ١٢٣. The reverse mode changes Arabic-script digits back into Western digits. The converter works digit by digit, so it keeps the same number value and does not translate the number into Arabic words before you copy the result.
Choosing the Digit Style
Eastern Arabic digits use the Unicode range U+0660 through U+0669 and are shown as ٠١٢٣٤٥٦٧٨٩. Persian text commonly uses extended Arabic-Indic digits from U+06F0 through U+06F9, shown here as ۰۱۲۳۴۵۶۷۸۹. Urdu commonly uses the same code points, though some fonts and language settings can display different preferred shapes for a few digits. Choose the style that matches the language, audience, or source material you are preparing.
Decimals, Commas, Dates, and Direction
If Arabic separators are enabled, the converter changes a decimal point to ٫, a thousands comma to ٬, and a percent sign to ٪. For example, 4,567.89 becomes ٤٬٥٦٧٫٨٩. Dates and hyphenated values keep their punctuation unless you type separators that the tool is designed to replace. Arabic text is right to left, but multi-digit numbers keep normal place value, so the ones digit remains on the right.
When You Need the Chart Instead
Use this page when you need a custom conversion and a copyable result. Use the Arabic numerals chart when you need a printable 0 to 100 reference table, a CSV for spreadsheet work, or a PDF handout. Keeping the converter and the reference page separate makes the site easier to expand later with other number systems and other dedicated converters.
Common Conversion Mistakes
The most common mistake is treating the number as if it should be reversed because Arabic text runs right to left. Do not reverse the digit order. The value 123 becomes ١٢٣, with the hundreds, tens, and ones places still in the same order. Another mistake is expecting a word translation. This tool changes symbols only, so 2026 becomes Arabic-script digits but does not become an Arabic phrase. For spelling numbers as words, use a number-to-words tool instead.