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Identify Fonts Online with These Free Tools

Identify Fonts Online with These Free Tools

Find fonts from text or images using these free tools.

Have you found a font you like but don’t know the name? These tools can help you find the name using an image or text.

WhatTheFont

WhatTheFont is probably the best known site for font identification. WhatTheFont searches 130,000+ fonts and displays a list of possible matches. Drag and drop or upload an image, select a crop box and see the list of results (most often paid fonts).

What Font is

What Font has an upload, drag and drop, copy/paste or URL interface to match fonts. It has a catalog of 700K+ fonts that searches across publisher, producer or foundry. With the addition of a font finder AI, they can return several results of free and paid fonts. Another useful feature is a “similar font” finder. If you want a font similar to a commercial font or are looking for something a little different than a certain font, give it a try. You can view a list of all the 679,801 of the fonts they use for matching and sort them by free for personal use, commercial, or both.

Font Squirrel Font Identifier

Font Squirrel Font Identifier has an upload, drag and drop and image URL interface. It searches fonts from Font Squirrel, Fontspring, and MyFonts. It works by detecting individual shapes in an image. Enter the corresponding letter below each shape to get a match or further crop the image. There’s an option to view only free fonts.

Fontspring Matcherator

Fontspring matches fonts with an upload, drag and drop, or URL interface. Fontspring can match Open Type features and has a tag refinement feature for hard to match fonts.

Identifont

What if you don’t have an image to work from to find a font? Identifont has the tools to help you drill down using several critera. Find fonts by appearance, name, similarity, picture, designer or publisher.  An additional set of tools can filter using unusual font features, differences, tall fonts, wide fonts, and equal width fonts. If you have limited set of letters or numbers you can search using only those characters.
Identifont has a section of free fonts in several categories.

Font identifying isn’t perfect, but these tips from Font Meme can help get better results:

  1. Get the text as horizontal as possible. Sometimes you may need to rotate the image in an image editor tool first to make it horizontal.
  2. Generally letters should be at least 100 pixels tall in the image and the background of letters in the image should not be complex, better in one color.
  3. Letters should not be connected together or the tool will think they are one letter. Try to crop one or two letters out of the image and then submit.
  4. Choose letters that are distinct to that font. If you can’t decide on that, try to upload different groups of letters or you can simply narrow down and spot the font in the final suggested fonts.

If a font name remains elusive, these three resources can probably find the name:

Both WhatTheFont and the well-known site DaFont have forums where you can get for help identifying a font, or put in a request at Font ID.

Boris Diedrich

Boris is a dedicated writer for our technical editorial team who specializes in putting complex topics into simple words. His goal is to provide his readers with high-quality and informative content. His articles are easy to understand and can be understood by professionals and laymen alike. He is a master at entertaining and informing his readers.

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