How To Activate Emoji | Turn On Emoji Keyboard

Enable the emoji keyboard in your device settings, then tap the smiley or globe key while typing to insert emoji.

Emoji can feel “missing” even when they’re already on your device. A single setting, a keyboard layout, or one hidden icon can block them. Once you know where your device keeps emoji, turning them on takes minutes.

This walkthrough covers iPhone, Android, Windows, and Mac. You’ll also get fixes for the usual pain points: no emoji key, no globe/smiley icon, shortcuts not working, and apps that behave differently from the rest.

How Emoji Works On Phones And Computers

Emoji aren’t a separate app. They’re characters, like letters. Your keyboard shows them through an emoji keyboard or emoji panel. If that keyboard isn’t enabled, the emoji button won’t show up.

Most systems use three pieces:

  • Keyboard settings that decide which keyboards are installed
  • A switch button (smiley, globe, or long-press key) that flips to emoji
  • A picker where you browse, search, and insert emoji

When something breaks, it usually breaks in one of those spots. That’s good news, since each spot has a straightforward fix.

How To Activate Emoji On iPhone, Android, Windows, And Mac

If you want the fastest path, use the steps for your device below. After that, jump to the troubleshooting sections if your emoji button still won’t show.

Activate Emoji On iPhone And iPad

On iPhone and iPad, emoji is a keyboard you can add. Once it’s installed, you can switch to it while typing.

  1. Open Settings.
  2. Tap General, then Keyboard.
  3. Tap Keyboards, then Add New Keyboard.
  4. Select Emoji.

Now test it:

  1. Open any app where you can type (Messages, Notes, Mail).
  2. Tap into a text field so the keyboard appears.
  3. Tap the smiley face key, or press and hold the globe key and pick Emoji.

If your iPhone shows stickers or Memoji mixed in, that’s normal. You’re still on the emoji keyboard. Apple’s official steps for adding and using emoji are here: Use emoji on iPhone and iPad.

Activate Emoji On Android

Android can use different keyboard apps. Many phones come with Gboard or a manufacturer keyboard (Samsung Keyboard, SwiftKey, and others). Emoji usually appears as a smiley key, a long-press option, or a small icon near the space bar.

Option A: Turn On Emoji Inside Your Keyboard App

  1. Open a messaging app and tap a text field so the keyboard appears.
  2. Look for a smiley icon. On some keyboards it sits near the space bar.
  3. Tap it to open emoji. Tap the ABC key to return to letters.

Option B: Install Or Switch To A Keyboard That Includes Emoji

If you don’t see a smiley icon at all, switch keyboards. This is often faster than hunting through manufacturer menus.

  1. Open Settings on your phone.
  2. Search for Keyboard or On-screen keyboard.
  3. Enable a keyboard app you trust (many people pick Gboard).
  4. Return to a text field and switch keyboards using the keyboard switch icon.

If your keyboard has a comma key, try pressing and holding it. Some layouts tuck emoji access behind that long-press menu.

Activate Emoji On Windows 11 And Windows 10

Windows uses a built-in emoji panel. You don’t need to install anything in most cases.

  1. Click into any text field where you can type (a browser text box, Notepad, a chat app).
  2. Press Windows key + . (period).
  3. Pick an emoji, or type a word to search.

If that shortcut does nothing, keep reading. Settings, app focus, and keyboard layout can block it. Microsoft documents the shortcut here: Windows keyboard tips and tricks.

Activate Emoji On Mac

Mac has a built-in character viewer. It works in most apps that accept text.

  1. Click into a text field.
  2. Press Control + Command + Space.
  3. Browse emoji or type to search, then click to insert.

If nothing appears, your app may block the viewer, or a shortcut conflict may be in play. You can change shortcuts in System Settings under Keyboard.

Common Emoji Buttons And Where They Hide

Emoji access varies by device and by keyboard layout. These patterns help you spot it faster:

  • Smiley face: opens emoji directly
  • Globe: switches keyboards; emoji may be one of the options
  • Long-press: emoji tucked under the comma, enter key, or a symbol key
  • Panel shortcut: Windows key + period; Mac Control + Command + Space

If you see a globe but no smiley, press and hold the globe to cycle keyboards. If emoji is installed, it should appear in that list.

Where The Emoji Setting Lives By Device

When you want a reliable checklist, this table gives you the common “path” to enable emoji and the fastest way to open it once enabled.

Device Enable Path Open Emoji While Typing
iPhone / iPad Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards > Add New Keyboard > Emoji Tap smiley, or press/hold globe and pick Emoji
Android (Gboard) Settings > System > Keyboard (varies) > Manage keyboards Tap smiley, or long-press comma and select emoji
Android (Samsung Keyboard) Settings > General management > Keyboard list and default Tap smiley, or tap the emoji icon on the toolbar
Windows 11 Built-in (no install needed on most PCs) Windows key + . (period)
Windows 10 Built-in (no install needed on most PCs) Windows key + . (period)
Mac Built-in (Character Viewer) Control + Command + Space
Chromebook Settings > Advanced > Languages and inputs (varies) Search key + Shift + Space (varies by model)
iPad With External Keyboard Emoji keyboard added in iPad settings Use globe key to switch, or use on-screen picker when available

Fixes When Emoji Is Missing Or Won’t Open

When emoji won’t show, the fix depends on what you see on screen. Start with the symptom that matches your setup.

No Smiley Or Globe Key On iPhone

This usually means Emoji isn’t added as a keyboard, or your keyboard switch key is set to cycle through fewer keyboards.

  1. Add the Emoji keyboard in Settings under Keyboard > Keyboards.
  2. Open a text field, then press and hold the globe key to view keyboard options.
  3. If you use one keyboard only, the globe may not show. Add a second keyboard temporarily, then switch back after you confirm emoji is visible.

Emoji Shows In One App, Missing In Another

Some apps swap the keyboard toolbar or override input views. Test emoji in two places:

  • Try Messages or Notes as a baseline.
  • Try the app where emoji is missing.

If emoji works in Messages but not in that app, update the app and your OS. App-level keyboard bugs are common after OS updates.

Android Keyboard Has No Emoji Button

On Android, the keyboard app controls emoji access. If the emoji key is hidden, you can usually bring it back through the keyboard’s preferences.

  1. Open a text field so the keyboard appears.
  2. Tap the keyboard settings icon (often a gear), or open Settings and search for your keyboard name.
  3. Enable any setting related to emoji key, emoji switch, or toolbar icons.
  4. If your keyboard doesn’t offer it, switch to a keyboard app that does.

Windows Emoji Panel Shortcut Does Nothing

Windows key + period needs an active text cursor. If no text box is focused, nothing happens.

  • Click inside a text field first, then try the shortcut again.
  • Test in Notepad. It’s a clean way to rule out app conflicts.
  • If your keyboard layout remaps keys, confirm the Windows key works for the Start menu.

If the Windows key is disabled by a gaming mode or a keyboard utility, turn that mode off, then retry the shortcut.

Mac Emoji Viewer Won’t Show

On Mac, shortcut conflicts are common. Try these checks:

  1. Click inside a text field, then press Control + Command + Space.
  2. Test in Notes or TextEdit.
  3. Check System Settings > Keyboard for shortcut conflicts, then adjust the Character Viewer shortcut.

Troubleshooting Table: Match The Symptom To The Fix

Use this as a fast diagnostic map. Pick your symptom, then apply the matching fix.

What You See Likely Cause What To Do
Emoji keyboard not listed on iPhone Emoji not added as a keyboard Add Emoji under Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards
Globe key present, no emoji option Emoji keyboard not installed Add Emoji keyboard, then press/hold globe to switch
Android keyboard shows symbols only Keyboard app hides emoji key Open keyboard settings and enable the emoji key or toolbar icon
Windows key + . does nothing No text field focused Click into a text box, then use Windows key + . again
Windows key works, emoji panel still absent Keyboard utility blocks shortcut Disable gaming mode or remap utility, then retry
Mac shortcut opens nothing in one app App blocks character viewer Try in Notes; update the app; use Edit menu if available
Emoji appear as empty boxes Font or OS can’t render newer emoji Update OS; update the app; test in a browser and in a system app
Emoji search returns few results Keyboard language pack mismatch Add your main language keyboard, then enable emoji search in keyboard settings

Make Emoji Faster To Use Once It’s On

After emoji is activated, speed comes from setup, not scrolling. These tweaks keep emoji one tap away.

Pin Frequently Used Emoji

Most keyboards track frequently used emoji automatically. Use a small, consistent set for a week and your top picks move to the front. That’s the easiest speed boost.

Use Search Instead Of Scrolling

Emoji libraries are large. Scrolling works for faces, but it slows down fast for objects, flags, and niche icons. Get used to searching by plain words like “pizza,” “rocket,” or “calendar.”

Keep One Keyboard Switch Method

If you switch between three keyboards and emoji, the globe key can feel like roulette. If you only need one language and emoji, remove extra keyboards you never use. Fewer keyboards means fewer taps to reach emoji.

When Emoji Still Looks Wrong

Emoji can be “on” and still look off. Two common reasons:

  • Version mismatch: New emoji may not display on older OS versions. You might see a blank square or a generic box.
  • Style differences: Emoji design varies by platform. The same emoji can look different on iPhone vs Android vs Windows.

If you see blank squares, update your OS first, then update the app where you’re typing. If the emoji looks different on a friend’s phone, that’s normal. The character is the same, the artwork differs.

Final Check: Your One-Minute Emoji Test

Before you walk away, run this quick test so you know the fix worked everywhere you care about:

  1. Open a notes app and insert three emoji from three categories.
  2. Use emoji search and insert one result.
  3. Open your main messaging app and repeat the same steps.
  4. Send a message to yourself and confirm emoji renders correctly in the sent view.

If all four steps pass, your emoji setup is done. If one app fails and others pass, focus on that app’s update, permissions, and keyboard behavior. Your device is already configured.

References & Sources