Bijoy to Avro Converter (বিজয় ⇄ অভ্র)

Avro uses Unicode, so this tool converts your Bijoy (SutonnyMJ / ANSI) Bangla into Unicode — ready for Avro, websites, Word, and any modern app. Free and private.

Bijoy → Unicode

🔒 100% private — conversion runs entirely in your browser. Nothing is uploaded or stored.

What is a Bijoy to Avro converter?

Avro is a phonetic Bangla keyboard that produces standard Unicode, so a Bijoy to Avro converter is really a Bijoy → Unicode conversion: it takes your font-based Bijoy (SutonnyMJ / ANSI) text and rebuilds it as clean Unicode Bangla you can type, edit, and reuse with Avro and any modern app — free, accurate, and entirely in your browser.

How to convert Bijoy to Avro

  1. Paste your Bijoy (SutonnyMJ) text into the left box.
  2. Get Unicode instantly on the right — this is the Avro-compatible text.
  3. Copy or Download PDF and use it in any modern app.

Bijoy to Avro: a real example

The same Bangla sentence — a line from the national anthem — in Bijoy (SutonnyMJ / ANSI) and converted to Unicode (Avro-compatible) with this tool:

EncodingThe text
Bijoy (SutonnyMJ / ANSI) inputAvgvi †mvbvi evsjv‡`k
Unicode (Avro-compatible) outputআমার সোনার বাংলাদেশ

The Bijoy input looks like Latin characters because it is ANSI text waiting for the SutonnyMJ font. The Unicode output displays as proper Bangla everywhere — no special font required.

Why “Bijoy to Avro” means Bijoy to Unicode

Avro doesn’t have its own encoding — it’s a keyboard that outputs Unicode. So “converting to Avro” simply means converting to the Unicode standard Avro types in. Bijoy, by contrast, is a font-based ANSI system where Bangla glyphs sit on English byte positions. This tool maps those ANSI positions back to real Unicode characters — see Bijoy vs Unicode for the full picture.

Where can you use the Unicode output?

Everywhere modern text works. Standard Unicode Bangla displays correctly on Facebook, WhatsApp, websites, Microsoft Word, Google Docs, email, and phones — with no special font installed. It is also searchable and copy-paste friendly, unlike Bijoy ANSI text. New to Bangla fonts? See our guide to the best Bangla Unicode fonts.

Who needs Bijoy → Avro?

  • Anyone with old Bijoy documents who needs editable, web-ready Unicode.
  • Web editors & bloggers publishing legacy SutonnyMJ content online.
  • Students & office staff moving printed-era files into modern apps.
  • Social media users who want Bijoy text to post correctly on Facebook.
Looking for the reverse? Try Avro to Bijoy, or the main Bijoy to Unicode converter.

Frequently asked questions

How does Bijoy to Avro conversion work?

Avro uses Unicode, so converting “Bijoy to Avro” means converting your Bijoy (SutonnyMJ / ANSI) text into Unicode — which you can then type, edit, or reuse with Avro and any modern app.

What is the difference between Bijoy and Avro?

Bijoy is a font-based ANSI system where Bangla glyphs sit on English byte positions, used in print and DTP. Avro is a phonetic keyboard that produces Unicode — the modern standard that works everywhere online. Converting between them means converting ANSI and Unicode.

Do I need to install Avro or any font to use this?

No. The converter runs fully in your browser with no install. The Unicode output it produces needs no special font and displays as Bangla everywhere automatically.

Will the output work in Facebook, Word and websites?

Yes. The result is standard Unicode Bangla, which displays correctly everywhere without any special font.

Does it convert conjuncts (যুক্তাক্ষর) correctly?

Yes. The converter maps full Bijoy ANSI clusters — conjuncts, reph, and vowel signs — back to their correct Unicode characters, so complex words come out right, not just simple letters.

Does it work on mobile phones?

Yes. The converter works in any modern mobile browser, and the Unicode output it produces displays correctly on both Android and iPhone with no extra font.

Is it free and private?

Yes — free, no install, and 100% in your browser.

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