JSON to C#
Paste JSON and get a C# class with auto-properties, PascalCase naming, List<T> for arrays, and nested types. Drop straight into your .NET project.
JSON in, C# out
Paste a typical JSON payload and the tool emits idiomatic C# types — nested objects each become their own type.
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"isActive": true
}Generated C# appears here.
What you'll use this for
Skip the boilerplate. Whenever you have an example JSON payload and need typed code on the other side, paste and generate.
API client models
Generate DTOs for a third-party REST API from a sample response.
Database row types
Model JSON columns or document-store records as native C# types.
Mobile + backend parity
Keep client and server types in sync — both generated from the same JSON.
Fixtures and tests
Turn fixture JSON into typed code for unit tests and integration mocks.
How to convert JSON to C#
Paste your JSON
Drop a valid JSON object into the left editor. Arrays at the root work too — the first element is sampled.
Pick a class name
Default is Root. Use anything PascalCase that fits your domain.
Click Generate
Or leave auto-generate on for live updates as you edit JSON. Runs entirely in your browser.
Copy or download
Copy to clipboard or save as a .cs file ready to drop into your project.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Each nested JSON object becomes its own C# class with PascalCase naming.
Yes. Properties use { get; set; } auto-implementation — the standard C# idiom.
PascalCase is used for property names. For wire-format JSON, configure System.Text.Json options or add [JsonPropertyName] as needed.
Yes. Completely free, no signup, no limits. Runs entirely in your browser.
About JSON to C#
This tool converts a sample JSON payload into idiomatic C# code. Every nested object is recursively turned into its own type with PascalCase naming, while keys are converted to the conventional case for the language.
Type inference
- Strings stay strings.
- Integers use the language's widest safe integer type (e.g.
long,Int,i64). - Decimals become double-precision floats.
- Arrays become a generic list keyed off the first element's type.
- Booleans map to the native boolean type.
- Nested objects recurse into their own type definitions.
Privacy
- All conversion happens locally in your browser.
- No JSON ever leaves your device.
- No signup, no tracking of payloads.