Download Fonts Free

Free fonts: quick links

01. Serif fonts
02. Sans-serif fonts
03. Handwriting fonts
04. Retro and vintage fonts
05. Brush fonts
06. Tattoo fonts
07. Graffiti fonts
08. Unusual fonts

Getting the right font to suit your project is vital, but searching for the best free fonts can be a pain. Scrolling through thousands of seemingly similar fonts only to find the one you want costs a small fortune can be a frustrating experience.

That's why we've created this post compiling the best free fonts available to download. We've also divided the fonts up into eight handy categories so you spend less time scrolling and more time delighting in the new free fonts you've found for your project. Our categories are:

  • Serif fonts – often found in projects involving lengthy text, such as books, newspapers and magazines.
  • Sans serif fonts – commonly used for shorter text settings, such as captions and credits. Sans serifs are also a good choice for an audience of young children or anyone learning to read.
  • Handwriting fonts – lend an authentic handwritten feel to a project.
  • Retro and vintage fonts – the perfect choice of typeface for transporting your designs back in time. These fonts also work really well in sci-fi-themed artwork.
  • Brush fonts – like handwriting fonts, these are ideal for adding that handwritten touch, for example of invitations or greeting cards.
  • Tattoo fonts – these brilliant free fonts can complete a tattoo design.
  • Graffiti fonts – for adding an urban, gritty edge to any piece of artwork.
  • Unusual fonts – because some free fonts defy categorisation.

If you're in need of multiple fonts but are struggling with which typefaces best complement each other, our list of perfect font pairings should help.

Note that at the time of writing, the typeface collections listed here can be used in your projects for free, but please be sure to check the terms of use before you download these free fonts, as some are only suitable for personal not commercial use.

So what are you waiting for? Find your perfect free font to download and use right here.

The best free fonts: Serif fonts

01. Giveny

This classy free font lends a sophisticated feel to your project. It looks good on arty magazines, posters, greetings cards or quotes, and was created by Craft Supply Co. Multi-lingual characters are available, as are a range of punctuation marks. To use the font in your commercial projects, you can buy it for $15.

  • Free for personal use

02. Coldiac

For a luxurious serif font, look no further than Coldiac. It works well for a small amount of body text, or for headlines, print ads and other marketing materials. What makes Coldiac stand out is 'the relatively low contrast of strokes, the slightly squarish shapes of round characters and the emphasised businesslike nature', according to its creators. A commercial version of the font – which includes multilingual characters and illustrations is available for $15.

  • Free for personal use

03. Blacker

Blacker is not your average serif font. And that's why we love it. A twist on a classic design, Blacker is a wedge serif font family, created by Cosimo Lorenzo Pancini and Andrea Tartarelli. The designers' Behance page states Blacker is a 'take on the contemporary 'evil serif' genre: typefaces with high contrast, 1970s-evoking proportions and sharp wedge serifs'.

Blacker is available in six weights, from light to heavy, with matching italics. Prices for Blacker start from $25, however you can currently get Blacker Text Light and Blacker Display Medium Italic completely free.

  • Free for personal use (two weights only)

04. Poly

Poly is a medium contrast serif font for web use. It was designed by Nicolás Silva to give increased legibility than other web serifs even at smaller point sizes. It achieves this with a vertical emphasis, utilising short ascenders and a very high x-height to ensure clarity.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

05. Bitter

English movies dubbed in hindi download. Sans-serif fonts tend to work better for screen use, but this free slab serif typeface has been specially designed to provide a comfortable reading experience on screens. Bitter was designed by Sol Matas, and is available through Argentinian type collaborative Huerta Tipográfica. It combines generous x-heights with minimal variation in stroke weight.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

06. Barbaro

Barbaro is a free font created Iván Nuñez that comes in two styles: Barbaro Roman and Barbaro Western. Nuñez is from the Dominican Republic, where the word 'barbaro' has a range of meanings from 'super' or 'fantastic' to 'crazy' or 'imprudent' (we reckon this font is in line with the first two). Barbaro would look great on a poster or as part of a menu or signage and is available for use in your personal projects.

  • Free for personal use

07. Playfair Display

This free serif display font takes inspiration from the late 18th century European Enlightenment and the work of type designer John Baskerville. The high-contract letterforms have delicate hairlines, relating to the rise in popularity of pointed steel pens, which took over from the previous broad nib quills during this period. The typeface design is a project led designed by Dutch designer Claus Eggers Sørensen.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

08. Lora

Lora is a free font that has its roots in calligraphy. It was originally designed for type foundry Cyreal in 2011, with a Cyrillic extension added in 2013, and comes in four styles: regular, bold, italic, and bold italic.

Brushed curves contrast with driving serifs to give this free font a well-balanced, contemporary feel. Although Lora is technically optimised for use on the web, it also works well in print projects.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

09. Butler

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Inspired by both Dala Floda and the Bodoni family, Butler is a free font designed by Fabian De Smet. His aim was to bring a bit of modernism to serif fonts by working on the curves of classical serif fonts, and adding an extra stencil family.

The Butler family contains 334 characters, seven regular weights and seven stencil weights, and includes text figures, ligatures and fractions. It also suits many different languages with its added glyphs. De Smet suggests it would work well for “posters, very big titles, books and fancy stuff”.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

10. Arvo

Arvo is a geometric slab-serif font family that’s suitable for both screen and print use. Designed for legibility, it was created by Anton Koovit and published in the Google Font directory as a free open font (OFL). Unlike many slab serifs on Google Fonts, Arvo contains normal, italic, bold and bold italic styles.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

11. Crimson Text

Here’s a free font family created specifically for book production, inspired by old-time, Garamond-esque book typefaces. Crimson Text is the work of German-born, Toronto-based designer Sebastian Kosch, who says he was influenced by the work of Jan Tschichold, Robert Slimbach and Jonathan Hoefler.

It’s also favourite free font of Taylor Palmer, a senior UX designer based in Utah, USA. 'Crimson is a sophisticated serif that makes a nice alternative to traditional Garamond-esque typefaces,” he says. “It also has a very expressive italic, which pairs nicely with strong, geometric sans-serifs like Futura or Avenir.'

  • Free for personal and commercial use

12. Aleo

Aleo has semi-rounded details and a sleek structure, giving a sense of personality while maintaining a good level of legibility. This free font family comprises six styles: three weights (light, regular and bold), with corresponding true italics. Released under the SIL Open Font License, it was designed by Alessio Laiso, a designer at IBM Dublin, as the slab serif companion to Lato.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

13. Brela

Brela is a humanistic serif font designed exclusively for editorial design. With a generous x-height, it’s very legible, even at tiny sizes, yet it works equally well in bold, large headlines. This free font was designed by Spanish creative agency Makarska Studio and comes in regular and bold weights.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

14. Libre Baskerville

Libre Baskerville is a web font optimised for body text (typically 16px). It’s based on the American Type Founder's Baskerville from 1941, but it has a taller x-height, wider counters and a little less contrast, allowing it to work well for reading on screen. This open source project is led by Impallari Type, a type design foundry based in Rosario, Argentina.

'I like to keep my eye on the Libre fonts, like Libre Baskerville,” enthuses Taylor Palmer, a senior UX designer based in Utah, USA. He also recommends you check out its sister font, Libre Franklin, which is also free. “Libre Franklin hearkens back to strong, traditional typefaces, like Franklin Gothic, that have the declarative nature of something like a newspaper headline but are simple enough to set as paragraph text,' he explains.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

15. Slabo

Slabo was designed by John Hudson, co-founder of Tiro Typeworks foundry. Slabo is a growing collection of size-specific web fonts, with Slabo 27px and Slabo 13px out so far, fine-tuned precisely for use at those specific pixel sizes. The blocky feel of its ligatures give a modern twist to the serif font, perfect for online designs.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

16. Bree Serif

Created by indie type foundry TypeTogether, Bree Serif is the free serif cousin of the paid-for font family, Bree. Described as a 'friendly upright italic', Bree Serif is modern and has an easy-to-read face when used at larger point sizes. Its rounded 'a' with a single counter is a nice touch, too.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

17. Merriweather

A truly open source free serif font, Merriweather has its own project on GitHub. It was designed by Sorkin Type to be easy to read on screens, particularly. 'It features a very large x-height, slightly condensed letterforms, a mild diagonal stress, sturdy serifs and open forms,' it says.

  • Free for personal and commercial use

Next page: Free sans-serif fonts

Your computer came with lots of functional preinstalled fonts, but if you're tired of using the same ones repeatedly, you can download novelty fonts and other fun typefaces for any project.

Once you've downloaded a font to your computer, you have to install it in order for your word processor, image editor, or another program to use it.

How and Where to Download Fonts

You can find fonts for your computer in lots of places. Some of the more popular sites are dafont.com, FontSpace, and 1001 Free Fonts.

Most sites have fonts that are for sale or request a shareware fee, but many of them, such as the ones linked above, also offer a selection of free fonts. For free fonts, there's usually a Download button next to a preview of the font.

macOS recognizes TrueType (TTF) and OpenType (OTF) font formats. Windows can install fonts in those formats as well as bitmap fonts (FON).

How to Install a Font

The steps for installing a font are nearly the same in Windows and macOS. The basic idea is to open the font file and click the install button, and if the font is in an archive, you need to open the archive file first.

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  1. Double-click the font file.

    If the font file is in an archive (e.g., ZIP, BIN, 7Z, or HQX), double-click it to view the file. In Windows, you can instead right-click the archive and click Extract All. Another option is to use a file extractor tool.

  2. Click Install (Windows) or Install Font (Mac) to install the font file.

  3. You can now use the font just like any other one that was preinstalled.

If the program in which you're wanting to use the font was open when you installed the font file, exit the program and reopen it. The font might not show up as an option in the software until you restart the application.