[1] It is written in Old East Norse in the Younger Futhark,[1] and the runestone style is in a form called RAK.
It also contains an invocation to the Norse god Thor (Þor wigi þæssi kumbl), which it shares with a number of other runestones in Sweden and Denmark: the Rök runestone (Þōrr), the Velanda Runestone (Þorr vigi), Glavendrup stone (Þor wigi þæssi runaʀ), Sønder Kirkeby Runestone (Þor wigi runaʀ) and possibly Sö 140 (Siði(?)
)÷ ¶ .........n[su]n÷ k(a)rþigærþi¶ ÷ m(i)n(i)minni÷ --(u)[þ]ø÷ af(t)æft(÷) ¶ ÷ sasurSazur.÷ starStar¶ r(i)sþiresþi÷ stinsten÷ aftæft÷ tuþandøþan.÷ ÷ ki-mutr ÷ ¶ ... ...n ÷ k(a)rþi ¶ ÷ m(i)n(i) ÷ --(u) ÷ af(t) (÷) ¶ ÷ sasur ÷ star ¶ r(i)sþi ÷ stin ÷ aft ÷ tuþan ÷{} Ge[ʀ]mundr(?)
{} {} ... [su]n {} gærþi {} {} minni {} [þ]ø {} æft {} {} {} Sazur.
"þurÞor÷ uikiwigi÷ þisiþæssi÷ kumlkumbl.÷ þur ÷ uiki ÷ þisi ÷ kuml ÷Þor {} wigi {} þæssi {} kumbl.