URL Slug Generator
Paste a headline and get a ready page slug: Latin letters, lowercase, dashes instead of spaces, no special characters. Handy for articles, product pages, and categories.
Which scheme to use. For documents you need the passport scheme: since 2014 Russian passports, visas, and tickets use ICAO Doc 9303 rules, and the spelling must match letter for letter. GOST 7.79-2000 is for bibliographic records and academic work. The SEO slug mode turns a headline into a page address: «Как выбрать ноутбук» → kak-vybrat-noutbuk.
Letter mapping table
| Letter | Passport (ICAO) | GOST 7.79-2000 | SEO slug for URL |
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FAQ
Will this spelling work for an air ticket?
Yes. Air tickets use the same spelling as the passport — ICAO rules. Pick the “Passport” scheme and double-check against the actual passport: documents issued before 2014 may use older spellings.
Why does Юлия become Iuliia and not Yuliya?
Since 2014 Russia applies ICAO transliteration rules: «ю» is written as «iu», «я» as «ia», «й» as «i». So Юлия is Iuliia and Анастасия is Anastasiia. Older variants like Yuliya appear in passports issued earlier.
How is GOST different from the passport scheme?
GOST 7.79-2000 (system B) is reversible — the Cyrillic original can be restored from the Latin text, hence ё → yo, х → x, щ → shh. The ICAO scheme is simpler and made for documents: ё → e, х → kh, щ → shch.
Is my text sent to a server?
No. Transliteration runs in your browser in JavaScript — the text is never transmitted or stored anywhere.
Free online transliteration of Russian text into Latin letters. Three schemes: passport/air-ticket spelling (ICAO Doc 9303, the official standard in Russia since 2014), GOST 7.79-2000 (system B) for bibliography and academic work, and SEO slugs for page URLs.
The passport scheme helps with visa application forms, air tickets, and checking how a name is spelled in documents: Вячеслав → Viacheslav, Щукин → Shchukin, Юрьев → Iurev. The SEO slug mode turns a headline into a ready page address: lowercase, dashes instead of spaces, no special characters — «Привет, мир!» becomes privet-mir.
Everything runs locally in your browser: the text is not sent to a server and is not stored. The page includes a full letter mapping table for all three schemes, handy for checking a spelling by hand.