The 10 Best Google Fonts for Logos in 2025
We selected the most used and highly rated Google Fonts by designers to create modern and memorable logos.
Free and powerful Google Fonts for logo design
Google Fonts has over 1,500 type families — and knowing which ones to use for logos makes all the difference between a generic result and a striking visual. Here is the top 10 list of 2025, tested by real designers.
1. Outfit
Geometric, modern, and extremely versatile. Works great in logos for startups, tech brands, and digital products. It has 9 available weights.
2. Plus Jakarta Sans
One of the favorites among branding designers in 2024-2025. Humanist, with its own personality but without exaggeration. Excellent legibility at all sizes.
3. Playfair Display
The most popular serif on Google Fonts for luxury, fashion, and gastronomy logos. The contrast between thin and thick strokes creates natural elegance.
4. DM Sans
Clean, contemporary, and with an excellent Black (900) weight. Widely used in fintech, healthcare, and professional services logos.
5. Space Grotesk
Technical and geo-humanist at the same time. Great for tech, design, and creative brands. The characters have quirks that make them memorable.
6. Fraunces
A highly characterful optical serif. Ideal for artisanal brands, food, culture, and any project that needs a strong voice.
7. Inter
The gold standard for design systems. Less obvious for logos, but perfect when the goal is maximum clarity and credibility.
8. Syne
Geometric and with an editorial style. The Extra Bold (800) weight in uppercase is perfect for creative agencies and studio logos.
9. Raleway
Elegant with generous natural spacing. Works beautifully in fashion, beauty, and aspirational brand logos when applied in uppercase.
10. Nunito
Rounded and friendly. Perfect for children-focused brands, wellness apps, and any proposition that needs warmth.
How to test before choosing
Before deciding, test the font with your brand's actual name on Font4Logo. You'll simultaneously see how it behaves across different weights, sizes, and contexts — from favicon to headline.