This page compares Unicode encodings. Two situations are considered: eight-bit-clean environments and environments like Simple Mail Transfer Protocol that use only seven bits per byte, the high-order bit being ignored or used for parity. Standard Compression Scheme for Unicode and Binary Ordered Compression for Unicode are excluded from the comparison tables because it is difficult to simply quantify their size.
In summary
If space were the only consideration, UTF-32 would lose in almost every case since characters outside the basic multilingual plane are very rare, and one of the bytes of BMP characters in UTF-32 is always 0. For seven-bit environments UTF-7 clearly wins in terms of size over the combination of other Unicode encodings with quoted printable or base64. For eight-bit-clean environments things vary considerably depending on what code points are in the text.
In detail
The tables below list the number of bytes per code point for different Unicode ranges. Any additional comments needed are included in the table. The figures assume that overheads at the start and end of the block of text are negligible.
Eight-bit environments
Code range (hexadecimal) | UTF-8 | UTF-16 | UTF-32 | GB18030 |
000000 - 00007F | 1 | 2 | 4 | 1 |
000080 - 0007FF | 2 | 2 | 4 | 2 for stuff inherited from GB2312/GBK (e.g. most Chinese stuff) 4 for everything else. |
000800 - 00FFFF | 3 | 2 | 4 | |
010000 - 10FFFF | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
Seven-bit environments
This table may not cover every special case and so should be used for estimation and comparison only. To accurately determine the size of text in an encoding, see the actual specifications.
code range (hexadecimal) | UTF-7 | UTF-8 quoted printable | UTF-8 base64 | UTF-16 quoted printable | UTF-16 base64 | UTF-32 quoted printable | UTF-32 base64 | GB18030 quoted printable | GB18030 base64 |
000000 - 000032 | same as 000080-00FFFFFF | 3 | 1⅓ | 6 | 2⅔ | 12 | 5⅓ | 3 | 1⅓ |
000033 - 00003C | 1 for "direct characters" and possibly "optional direct characters" (depending on the encoder setting) 2 for +, otherwise same as 000080-00FFFFFF | 1 | 1⅓ | 4 | 2⅔ | 10 | 5⅓ | 1 | 1⅓ |
00003D (equals sign) | 3 | 1⅓ | 6 | 2⅔ | 12 | 5⅓ | 3 | 1⅓ | |
00003E - 00007E | 1 | 1⅓ | 4 | 2⅔ | 10 | 5⅓ | 1 | 1⅓ | |
00007F | 5 for an isolated case inside a run of single byte characters. For runs 2⅔ per character plus padding to make it a whole number of bytes plus two to start and finish the run | 3 | 1⅓ | 6 | 2⅔ | 12 | 5⅓ | 3 | 1⅓ |
000080 - 0007FF | 6 | 2⅔ | 2-6 depending on if the byte values need to be escaped | 2⅔ | 8-12 depending on if the final two byte values need to be escaped | 5⅓ | 4-6 for stuff inherited from GB2312/GBK (e.g. most Chinese stuff) 6-10 for everything else. |
2⅔ for stuff inherited from GB2312/GBK (e.g. most Chinese stuff) 5⅓ for everything else. | |
000800 - 00FFFF | 9 | 4 | 2⅔ | 5⅓ | |||||
010000 - 10FFFF | same as two characters from above | 12 | 5⅓ | 8-12 depending on if the low bytes of the surrogates need to be escaped. | 5⅓ | 5⅓ | 6-10 | 5⅓ |