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Free Online Tool

Kruti Dev to Unicode Converter for Tally

Convert Kruti Dev Hindi text from Tally ERP reports to Unicode Devanagari. Copy the output directly into any modern Tally version.

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or upload a file

Drop a .txt file here

or click to browse · .txt files only · max 2 MB

How to use the converter

Three steps. No account. Works entirely in your browser.

  1. Paste your Kruti Dev text

    Type or paste Kruti Dev encoded text into the left panel. You can also drag and drop a .txt file — the script is detected automatically.

  2. Conversion happens automatically

    As you type, the engine maps every character against the complete Kruti Dev 010 table and produces Unicode Devanagari in real time.

  3. Copy or download the output

    Click "Copy to clipboard" to paste into Word, WhatsApp, or any app — or download a .txt file. Both directions (Kruti Dev ↔ Unicode) work.

About This Tool

Kruti Dev to Unicode Converter for Tally Tally ERP and Tally Prime are among the most widely used accounting software packages in India, and a significant portion of small and medium businesses use them with Hindi-language data — including company names, ledger names, item descriptions, and narration text. Historically, Tally used Kruti Dev font for Hindi text display, which means any Hindi data entered in older Tally installations is stored in Kruti Dev encoding.

When businesses migrate to newer Tally versions, move data between systems, or export reports for use in modern applications, the Kruti Dev-encoded Hindi text often becomes garbled. This is because modern operating systems and applications interpret Kruti Dev characters as ASCII rather than Hindi. Converting the extracted text to Unicode before re-importing or sharing it solves this problem permanently.

Common scenarios include: exporting a Tally report to Excel where the Hindi ledger names appear as symbols; sharing a PDF invoice where Hindi text is unreadable on the recipient's device; or migrating a company database to a new server where the font configuration differs. In all these cases, converting the Kruti Dev text to Unicode ensures that the Hindi content is universally readable without any special font installation.

To use this converter for Tally data: open the report or ledger in Tally, use the export function to generate a text file (TXT or CSV), copy the Hindi text fields, paste them here, and copy the Unicode output. You can then paste the converted text back into your spreadsheet, document, or new system. For large datasets, consider using the file upload feature to convert entire text exports at once.

Ideal for kruti dev to unicode converter for tally workflows — paste your text in the box above and the converted output appears instantly. You can copy the result or download it as a .txt file.

Common Use Cases

Frequently Asked Questions

What font does Tally use for Hindi text?

Older versions of Tally (up to Tally ERP 9 in legacy mode) display Hindi using Kruti Dev font. Tally Prime uses Unicode Devanagari (specifically the Mangal/Unicode font) for Hindi. If you see garbled text when moving data between an old and new Tally installation, the cause is typically a Kruti Dev ↔ Unicode mismatch.

How do I extract Hindi text from Tally for conversion?

In Tally, open the relevant report (ledger, trial balance, etc.) and use Export → ASCII (Text) or Export → Excel to save it as a file. Open the file in Notepad, select the Hindi text you need to convert, and paste it into this converter. For ledger names, you can also open the Ledger Master and copy the name directly.

Will converting the text break the Tally data?

This converter works on a copy of the text — it does not modify your Tally database in any way. You copy text out of Tally, convert it here, and then use the converted text elsewhere (in a document, a new system, etc.). Your original Tally data remains intact.

Can I convert Hindi item names in Tally stock reports?

Yes. Copy the stock item names or descriptions from your Tally report, paste them into the converter, and the Unicode output will be readable on any device without Kruti Dev font. This is particularly useful when sending inventory reports to suppliers or auditors who do not have Tally or Kruti Dev installed.

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