Typography and fonts make up the backbone of your brand. Along with your colors, textures and graphics, fonts are essential to creating brand elements for your design projects.
We’ve collected 100 of the best free fonts for your brand elements, and they’re all available inside your Visme editor.
All fonts on this list are free for personal use and commercial use. Many of them are listed as Google fonts and others are from reputable font foundries.
Choose the category of font you’d like to see more of or scroll to see them all.
100 Free Fonts for Commercial Use
Category #1: Retro Fonts
Category #2: Script Fonts
Category #3: Elegant Fonts
Category #4: Sans Serif Fonts
Category #5: Modern Fonts
Category #6: Display Fonts
Before we get started, here’s a video tutorial on how to pair fonts in your designs!
Category #1: Retro Fonts
Our first category is Retro Fonts. These are fonts that use vintage elements in their composition. Retro fonts aren’t exactly vintage fonts but more of a modern take on vintage typography styles.
You can use Retro fonts in designs like brochures, posters, flyers, logos and business cards. Let’s get started.
Font #1: Ansley Display
Ansley Display is reminiscent of ‘Old West’ style posters and other vintage print art. The strong serifs make an impact when used in a header or title.
Font #2: Trocchi
Trocchi was inspired by vintage typefaces from the late 1700s. This font is excellent for both titles and text. As a casual serif, it goes well with elegant brands that don’t take themselves too seriously.
Font #3: Yellowtail
The first script font on the list is Yellowtail. A bit loose, a bit orderly, the perfect mix of both. Yellowtail was inspired by the lettering of sign painters in the 1930s and looks great in display text elements.
Font #4: Oregano
Oregano font was inspired by calligraphy artist, Randy Holub. It works well on advertisements, flyers, social media graphics and greeting cards. This font is ideal for making a subtle statement without going over the top.
Font #5: Theano Didot
Theano Didot is a serif font elegantly inspired by Greek letters and calligraphy. Initially, this font was created only for use with the Greek alphabet but extended to Latin languages later. This font is ideal as a header but also works well as text.
You can also use this font right inside Visme by customizing the letterhead template below for your business letters and communications.
Customize this template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #6: Lora
Lora is a friendly font loosely inspired by calligraphy and handwritten type. The curvatures and subtle serifs are a refreshing combination for a serif font that works great as body text.
Font #7: Deutsch Gothic
This retro font goes back to medieval times. The Gothic style in Deutsch Gothic is solid and impactful. This font is a good choice for display headers that tell a particular story.
Font #8: 1942 Report
Of all the retro fonts on this list, this one is a little different. Visually it resembles writing from a gritty typewriter from the era of the Conquistadores. Exciting and very bold.
Category #2: Script Fonts
The second category on our list is script fonts. These are all calligraphic style types, most with ligatures between letters, although many also resemble handwriting. Script fonts come in many styles, from elegant to simple calligraphy and writing.
Let’s see what script font choices you have inside your Visme editor.
Font #9: Journal
Journal is a casual script that feels like it’s been handwritten with a pen. Not an excellent font for long text or paragraphs but works well in short display titles or name labels.
Font #10: Bilbo
Bilbo is a warm script brush font with a handwritten feel. It has a sister font with swashes for a more elegant look on display titles. This is a perfect font for greeting cards, t-shirts with catchy phrases or short paragraph text.
Font #11: Playlist Script
Playlist Script is a beautiful calligraphy style font reminiscent of beautiful handwriting on love letters. It matches well with a robust all-caps font for a fun pairing that works great on mugs, merchandise, t-shirts and social media.
Design with this font pair right inside Visme.
Create your own graphic today!Try It For Free
Font #12: Pacifico
Pacifico is a script font inspired by 1950s surf culture. It’s a bouncy and fresh script with ligatures between most letters. This free font looks great on large signs or friendly messaging on billboards.
Font #13: Black Jack
Black Jack is a brush-style script font that looks great as a signature or in a quote graphic. This script font also fits in the elegant and retro categories because it’s so versatile.
Font #14: Dancing Script
Dancing Script is a relatable font that resembles tidy hand-lettering. With characters that differ in height, this font is perfect for projects that need a bit of personality and warmth.
Font #15: Daniel
Daniel is a hand lettering font with delicate movement and a minimalist style. The capital letters are large, take up space and make a visual impact. This is an excellent font for titles and signatures.
Font #16: Selima
Selima is a unique brush script font perfect for vibrant social media graphics and blog titles. This fun hand-lettering font also works well with package design and labels.
Font #17: Great Vibes
Great Vibes is an elegant, flowing calligraphic script font ready to be used on wedding invitations and holiday greetings cards. This font is excellent for prim and proper design but pairs well with a strong sans serif font for a modern feel.
Category #3: Elegant Fonts
Moving on, the next category is elegant fonts. Many of the fonts in the category above, script fonts, also fit inside the elegant category.
Let’s take a look at the elegant and free serif fonts available inside Visme.
Font #18: Amiri
Amiri is an Arabic typeface that also works well as an elegant serif font in Latin letters. It’s perfect for long text in hardback novels or educative material. Its legibility is high and pairs well with its italic and bold variations.
Font #19: Audrey
Audrey is a thin feminine sans serif font with an elegance that transcends. It’s perfect for perfume brands, delicate messaging on packaging or logo design. It’s not a Google font but is available as a free font for personal use and commercial use.
Font #20: Bentham
Bentham is a classic-style serif font inspired by vintage textbooks and nineteenth-century maps. It’s one of those typefaces that works surprisingly well in longer text, making it pleasurable to read.
Font #21: Cormorant
Cormorant is an elegant serif font inspired by the all-time classic Garamond. What makes Cormorant unique is the small size of the letter counters, the closed spaces in letters like e, a and b.
Font #22: Jacques Francois
Jacques Francois has strong serifs and delicately slanted letters and numerals. You can feel a mix of old-style and modern techniques in this font. It’s great for titles, educational books and elegant marketing material.
Font #23: Otama E.P.
Otama E.P. is a confidently elegant font with powerful uppercase capitals and interesting lower case letters. This font is ideal for high-class products with elegant and classic marketing techniques.
Use this font in your graphics!Get Started
Font #24: ST Marie
ST Marie is a unique thin slab serif font perfect for elegant invitations, calling cards and intricate labels. It's not suitable for lengthy text or paragraphs but does work as a subtle title. Pair this font with a neutral font, so it balances out.
Font #25: Libre-Baskerville
Libre-Baskerville is an elegant web font optimized for text at 16 pt. It’s a small type family with regular, bold and italic variants. Use this font for sleek website content and bold marketing material.
Font #26: Linux Biolinum
Not many sans serif fonts are classified as elegant. Linus Biolinum is one of them. The spacing between letters (tracking) is generous and makes the font legible in lengthy texts. Pair it with the bold style as the title, and you’ve got a balance font design.
Font #27: Playfair Display
Playfair Display is a font family with different weights and variants. Visme has the regular weight with bold and italic variations. This is an elongated serif font, depicting the change from quills to pens in handwriting and calligraphy. It works best as a display font paired with a subtle font for text.
Font #28: Vollkorn
Vollkorn is a versatile, elegant font with a unique feel to the curvatures. Use this font to create familiarity with the viewer, as this is an inviting font for titles, labels and stamp style marketing designs. Great font for Cyrillic and Greek alphabets.
Font #29: Zantroke
Zantroke is an extra bold stocky serif font with tight tracking between letters. This font has a reminiscence to stencil styles and will work well on posters, billboards and large-scale design projects.
Font #30: Fjord
Fjord is a well-modulated font especially designed for long text and good readability. The letter construction is heavy but not overpowering and the spaces between serifs of different letters are nuanced and friendly.
Create your own design with Fjord, like we see below in this font pair.
Use this font in your graphics!Get Started
Font #31: Forum
Forum is a multilingual font with glyphs for Cyrillic, Asian Cyrillic, Eastern European and Baltic languages. The letterforms have elegant, angled serifs that don’t compete for your attention—great font for both long text and titles.
Font #32: Garton
Garton is a curly and elegant serif font with an inviting personality. It works on text blocks, but visually it won’t read like a textbook or novel, but more like a vintage letter or poster. The capital letters are particularly beautiful in an all-caps design.
See this font in action below.
Use this font in your graphics!Get Started
Font #33: Georgia
Georgia is one of the most versatile fonts on this list. Perfectly balanced between elegance and casual, it’s perfect for both long text and titles.
Font #34: Tenderness
Tenderness is an elegant serif that makes a statement without being overwhelming. This font works well in long text paired with a strong, bold display font.
Font #35: Merriweather
Merriweather is an elegant font specially designed to be legible on screens. This font keeps content looking sharp and neat and pairs well with Open Sans.
Font #36: EB Garamond
EB Garamond is an open-source version of the classic Garamond typeface. Of all the Garamond-inspired fonts, EB Garamond is a favorite with designers.
Category #4: Sans Serif Fonts
We’ve arrived at the largest category on our list. Sans serif fonts are the bread and butter of the typography world and work for many purposes depending on each font’s unique style.
Let’s dive into what is easily my favorite section of them all.
Font #37: Raleway
If you’ve seen any blog online, you’ve come across the Raleway font. It’s simple, easy to read and doesn’t compete with other elements in your design. It’s the perfect font for online content or easy-to-read print.
In Visme, you have access to the classic Raleway, plus the display variety of Raleway Dots.
You can use Raleway yourself by customizing this template below.
Customize this template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #38: Arial
Arial is the king of sans serif fonts. It’s generally the default choice on documents and long reports. Arial does the job and is always reliable. When in doubt, use Arial. If you’re bored with Arial, try Lato or Open Sans.
Font #39: Trebuchet MS
Trebuchet MS was created for the Microsoft Corporation in the 90s. It’s still considered one of the most used web fonts to this day. Trebuchet MS has some unique features in letters that make it stand out from other sans serif fonts, like the low bar on the capital A and the tiny curve on the lowercase l.
Font #40: Junction
Junction is another open source free font available for web applications. It was designed as a mix of a classic handwritten serif font with a web sans serif. The font is unique because the n and u have angled bowls instead of the usual round styles.
Font #41: Josefin Sans
Josefin Sans is a clean-cut geometric sans serif for any purpose. This is a great font for body text of any size. Easy to read at small point sizes and great for titles in the bold variant at a higher point size.
Font #42: Poppins
Poppins is a geometric font with a fun, relatable attitude. This is one of the best fonts for web and app design. User Interfaces are easy to follow with Poppins as the main font in both titles and body text.
Font #43: Montserrat
Montserrat is a versatile font that not only works well in both titles and text, it also works well for any industry. It’s the ultimate neutral font for any design project.
Take advantage of this font by customizing the brochure template below for your business.
Customize this template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #44: Helvetica
Helvetica is the queen of fonts. No other font even comes close, not even Futura. The font, Helvetica, is so ingrained in design history that it even has an entire documentary dedicated to it.
Font #45: Hind Madurai
Hind Madurai is a Tamil language font with Latin characters that mix well with each other. It’s an excellent font to choose if you’re working on a web application in Tamil.
Font #46: KoHo
KoHo is a Thai language font in a geometric style. It comes in two weights, regular and extra light for variation. This is the best sans serif typeface for commercial projects in Thai.
Font #47: Colaborate
Colaborate is a sans serif font family that seems to fly under the radar until you notice its unique details at the base of the lowercase t and b. This is also a highly multilingual font available in over 40 languages.
Font #48: Amaranth
Most fonts are created upright and then adjusted for an italic variant. Amaranth is the other way around. It’s an upright italic with easy-to-read letters with unique swashes and terminals.
Font #49:Roboto
Roboto is a unique fusion font reminiscent of classic serif fonts with Grotesk terminals. It sits like a serif font and reads like a sans serif, creating a perfect balance.
Visme has both Roboto regular and Roboto condensed, so you can pair them easily inside a design project.
Font #50: Source Sans Pro
Source Sans Pro was the first open source type family designed by Adobe. It’s specially engineered for user interfaces in web applications.
See Source Sans Pro in action in this template below.
Customize this infographic template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #51: Resagnicto
Resagnito is a decorative sans serif font with unique connectors inside letters. Both rounded and angular, this font is best for small body text, quote graphics or headers. Corporate design projects would be a good fit for this font.
Font #52: Molengo
Molengo is a simple, no-fuss sans font with a bit of flair. Just enough to make it too fancy for body text but just right as simple title text. Pair with a subtle font like Open Sans for the perfect combination.
Font #53: Hattori Hanzo
Hattori Hazo is a versatile oblique font to make stunning visuals or simple web applications. It’s highly multilingual and is highly legible at any point size.
Font #54: Muli
Muli is an Adobe font created for Adobe products like Photoshop and Illustrator but available in other tools like Visme. Muli is a complete type family, but Visme offers the regular weight in bold and italic variations.
Font #55: Myndraine
Myndraine is different in lowercase and uppercase. The Uppercase letters have angles terminals while the lowercase letters are rounded. Mixing uppercase and lowercase in this font can be a bit awkward.
Font #56: Fira Sans
Fira Sans is a highly versatile type family with many weights and variations. It’s the perfect font for any type of personal project. Inside your Visme dashboard, you’ll find Fira Sans, Fira Sans Bold and Fira Sans Light. If you want to have more weights available, just download them from Google fonts and upload them to your Brand Kit.
Font #57: Noto Sans
Noto Sans is one of the most versatile type families for multilingual projects. The Noto letters and special characters cover almost every language and also look great in any language. This is the ideal font for web design as it will always render as it should. In Visme, you’ll find Noto Sans, Noto Sans Condensed and Noto Serif.
Font #58: Verdana
Verdana is a registered font of the Microsoft Corporation and available to anyone for free. This has long been one of the most common fonts for documents in Microsoft doc. Even though it’s an easy font to use, designers sometimes feel like it’s overused.
Font #59: Open Sans
Open Sans is the font that pairs well with almost any display or serif font. It’s easy to read on both print and web and will save you every time you don’t know what sans font to use. Your Visme editor has Open Sans and Open Sans condensed for titles and subtitles.
Use this font yourself by customizing the template below.
Customize this template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #60: Oswald
Oswald is another of the new fonts on the list. It was created in 2011, primarily for web screens and applications. This is a bit of a condensed font and very easy to read. It’s an excellent choice for any design project as it suits most messaging.
Font #61: Panefresco
Panefresco is a relatively new font inspired by a font, Titillium, created by design students in Italy. This font has a unique italic variation with calligraphy swashes and details. It’s a fun font to use on titles and body text.
Font #62: Tajawal
Tajawal is at its core an Arabic font. If you’re looking to create a design project with Arabic messaging, Tajawal is your best choice. The glyphs are clean-cut and easy to read.
Font #63: Lato
Lato is one of those fonts that always delivers. Looks great on documents, websites, in uppercase, in lowercase, in all caps. It’s an all around great font. In Visme you have access to a few of the Lato weights including Lato Light, Lato Thin and Lato Regular. Plus the bold and italic variants.
Try out Lato in your next design by customizing this webinar presentation template below.
Customize this presentation template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #64: Economica
Economica, as the name suggests, is a font that economizes space. It was created as a print-ready font that takes up less space horizontally while not losing space vertically. Its condensed form looks great on body text that needs a bit of personality without going over the edge.
Font #65: Titillium Web
Titillium is a font designed by a group of students in a design university in Italy. The font has a digital air to it without being futuristic. It works well in a low weight in body text and sits well at a thick weight for titles.
Font #66: League Spartan
League spartan is friendly, relatable and attractive. It’s such a nice font that it’s begun to get overused. This font has only one weight and looks good in large titles, logos, labels, and short body text.
Work with this font right inside Visme.
Create your own graphic today!Try It For Free
Font #67: PT Mono
PT Mono is a free commercially licensed font designed especially for digital forms, worksheets and tables. Every letter has the same width. There is only one weight available for PT Mono and its use is very specific.
Category #5: Modern Fonts
The term modern fonts is used to describe a specific style of typography that was born after the classic style typefaces of the early 18th century. But nowadays, modern fonts can be classified in the academic term or a more loosely based term that defines a font as being unique, different from the majority and with a modern feel.
The academic examples of a Modern font are Bodoni and Didot. Everything else stems from those.
We’ve decided to go with a combination classification of modern fonts and below is our selection.
Font #68: Old Standard TT
Old Standard TT fits the academic classification of a modern serif font; straight vertical lines, hairline flat serifs, a difference in width between vertical and horizontal strokes. This font works great for corporate texts and designs that need a serious component.
Font #69: Julius Sans One
Julius Sans One fits in the loose modern category. It’s a relatively new sans font, but it stands out from the majority of sans serif fonts. This is a small-cap font, meaning that there are no lowercase letters and the uppercase are just taller versions of the same.
Font #70: Abel
Abel is a condensed sans font with a little flair. In small text, it looks like most condensed grotesque sans serif fonts, but in larger sizes, it shows off its unique angled terminals.
Font #71: Caviar Dreams
Caviar Dreams is a unique monoline font with differing letters in different widths. The rounded letters are wide, while the stick letters are thin. It’s an interesting combination that creates a flowing effect. This is a great font for logo design, web design headers and print labels. Not suited for long body text.
Font #72: Exo
Exo is a geometric font created for the web with 9 weights for plenty of variable font use. It has a modern contemporary feel mixing digital with classical. It pairs well with Roboto and Lato.
Font #73: Staatcliches
Staatcliches is a bold and powerful all uppercase font that stands out in the crowd. It’s perfect for posters and flyers that need to make an impact. Pair it with Montserrat on your next design and see how it goes.
Font #74: Samba
Samba is a monoline font with an overall square feel. This font is great for delicate header texts and short body texts in large point sizes. At a small size, you’d need to increase the line height for better legibility.
Font #75: Enigmatic
Enigmatic is a powerful sans serif font. It’s the ideal font for corporate designs and bold visuals. Enigmatic works great in e-books with visuals to counteract the heavy feel.
Font #76: Strait
Strait is a no-fuss font that works for pretty much anything. Its modern style gives it a subtle difference from others. It’s perfect for use in small spaces, you can fit more words per space.
Font #77: Noto Serif
Noto Serif has a unique combination of flat serifs and rounded terminals with a point. It’s this mix that brings it into a modern category. Not just a regular serif font, but a little extra.
Font #78: Okolaks
Okolaks is a fun font with an interesting letter form. The tiny curved terminals give the font a solid base even when the curvy letters feel airy. This is a font with personality.
Font #79: Overlock SC
Overlock is a font that inspires slow movement. The letter forms look like they’ve been blown on by the wind and are holding strong regardless. This font was inspired by the over lock sewing technique and has a fun demeanor.
It works well in body text at a low weight and great on titles at the highest weights. Visme has the regular weight, but you can download the others and add them to your Brand Kit.
Font #80: Fauna One
Fauna one is an almost serif font with a selection of terminals that taper off rounded. This font is a friendly alternative to elegant body text serif fonts like Garamond and Georgia.
Font #81: Forque
Forque is an all caps font with limited glyphs and no multi-language support. This is a font best suited for logos, posters, bold designs that use a few words. Pair it with a simple sans serif like Lato or even a soft serif like Georgia.
Font #82: Times New Roman
Times New Roman is a modern font designed especially for a newspaper. The association with this font and printed newspaper is strong. Most people will get that feeling at first sight. Use Times New Roman only if it fits your message, otherwise use a more subtle font.
Font #83: Marvel
Marvel is a delicate monoline sans serif with a unique touch. This font works well in web design, digital design and even print. It’s an easy-to-read, friendly font that pairs well with a bold display font for titles.
Font #84: Nixie One
Nixie One is a rebellious font. The designers mixed neon tubes with a typewriter-style font and created this unique monoline serif font they like to call a mix of chicken and pineapple. This font works best as display titles and short body text.
Font #85: Disco
Disco is a wide font with lots of monospace between letters. It’s a breathable font that works great for large titles and name labels on websites. This font isn’t suited for paragraphs but works great as wide titles.
Font #86: Dolce Vita
Dolce Vita is a bold all-caps font with a combination of straight and diagonal lines that makes certain letters stand out from the rest. This font is great if the title or word you write uses one of the special letters. It works great as a logo in that case.
Font #87: Dosis
Dosis is the type of font that has different personalities at each weight. The thin variant is airy and light, while the extra bold is bouncy and friendly. This is a monoline rounded font and works well in both titles and body text.
Category #5: Display Fonts
The last category is display fonts. These are font styles that are rebellious, out of the box, eye-catching and memorable. Most display fonts work only as titles or very short bodies of text, they aren’t suited for paragraphs or documents.
Let’s take a look at the display fonts available inside your Visme editor.
Font #88: Impact
Impact is the ultimate meme font. It was designed in the 1960s with the purpose of simply making an impact with type. The intended use was posters and advertisements. In the last decade, it has become ubiquitous with memes. Use Impact your memes or any design that needs to make an impact!
Font #89: Lintsec
Lintsec is a stencil-style font with military visual references. It’s a strong and bold font for text that needs to be noticeable. Take into account that the stencil effect doesn’t work visually for any style of project, it has to match your message.
Create your own design with this font pair.
Create your own graphic today!Try It For Free
Font #90: Bebas Neue
Bebas Neue is a clean-cut and beautiful display font perfect for headlines, labels, captions and packaging design. The free version available in Visme is all caps, but if you want the lowercase glyphs you can buy Bebas Neue and upload it to your Visme brand Kit.
Font #91: Antonio
Antonio is a well-balanced display font in all caps and with mono spaces between letters. It’s an easy font that doesn’t overwhelm. It looks great on web applications and digital design. Furthermore, it’s easy to read and will pair well with fonts like Open Sans.
Use this template to try Antonio out for yourself.
Customize this template and make it your own!Edit and Download
Font #92: Wagnasty
Wagnasty is a script typeface that resembles handwriting with a black liner pen. This is another all-cap font that works well in titles for creative projects that need a fresh human feel.
Font #93: Ostrich Sans Inline
Ostrich Sans Inline is a style of font that has a white empty area inside the regular black letterforms. This one is a variation of Ostrich Sans but with the inline feature added on. This font looks great in titles and labels and pairs well with fonts like Lato.
Create your own design with this font pair available inside Visme.
Create your own graphic today!Try It For Free
Font #94: Flux Architect
Flux is an all-caps display font inspired by architectural sketches. The strokes play a game of intensity with each other, giving the font a powerful personality and overall feel. It’s a great font for titles, captions or name tags.
Font #95: Top Secret
Top Secret is another stencil font similar to Lintsec. This particular font has a stamp-like outline inspired by Top Secret redacted documents. It’s best used as it’s intended, looking like a stamp.
Font #96: Distant Galaxy
Distant Galaxy is a unique font that combines a futuristic style with multilingual support for African languages. This is an all-cap font visually, but the true caps include an extra swash ligature for differentiation. Distant Galaxy is great for titles, logos and packaging labels.
Font #97: Rokkitt
Rokkitt is a slab serif display font with a heavy sitting base and a balanced combination of curves and straight angles. This font is in the display category because the serifs are a tad heavy for body text.
Font #98: Silkscreen
Silkscreen is a pixelated display font in an all cap style. This is an interesting font for select occasions but not very versatile. Only the letter with vertical sections look pixelate, the letter E or L are lackluster in comparison.
Font #99: CabinSketch
CabinSketch is a geometric sans font filled in with doodle sketches. It’s a fun and unique font for design projects that have to do with children, education and youth. It works perfectly as titles and short body text.
Font #100: Abril Fatface
Abril Fatface is a variation of the larger Abril type family. This variant is called fat face because of the large and thin stroke combination in the letters. This is a wonderful font for titles and headers in blogs, magazines and other journalistic projects.
Create your own design with this font pair.
Create your own graphic today!Try It For Free
Now Over to You
No more searching for font freebies!
You certainly have all the fonts you could ever need inside Visme for your creative projects. But we understand if you still can’t find what you want. Every graphic designer will tell you that they spend a lot of time in the preparation stage looking for the perfect font.
We previously published a selection of posts with free fonts that can help you find the unique high-quality font you’re dreaming of. In these guides, you’ll find fonts in different styles from lots of font makers around the world.
- 50 Free Futuristic and Modern Fonts to Give Your Designs an Edgy Look
- 50 Best Free Elegant Fonts to Level Up Your Designs
- The 50 Best Free Pretty Fonts for Your Creative Projects
Your next design project can use any of our free professional fonts. You can also upload any other great font, like Peace Sans or a dingbat set. Unless you want to pay a licensing fee, always check that the font you found with a free download option is also free for commercial use.
With so many free fonts for your brand elements to choose from, you’re on your way to creating amazing designs. With Visme you have a full design workshop at your disposal, from documents to infographics, social media graphics and beyond. We can’t wait to see what you create! Sign up for your free Visme account today.