Seven of the best font identifiers in 2023 (2023)

By Garrick Webster

published

The best font identifiers and browser extensions for when you've just got to have that font.

Seven of the best font identifiers in 2023 (1)

The best font identifiers can really help you out when you spot a font that you just know will come in handy for a project you're working on. They can save you from searching through screen after screen of your favourite font supplier’s site, or flicking through catalogue after catalogue.

Whether you’re creating labels for a new gin distillery, a website for a marketing agency, or creating your own merchandise, the right fonts will help give your designs the unique quality you and your clients are looking for. That’s why so many graphic designers are font hungry. We fill our bookshelves with print samples, and we’re constantly snapping signage on our smartphones.

But then what? It’s all well and good having thousands of samples, but if you don’t know what the typefaces are you can’t buy licenses and use them. That’s where the best font identifiers come in. From typewriter-inspired classicsthrough to the best free fontsfor web layouts, these font identifier tools can help you quickly identify the font you want – well, some of the time, at least, as we'll see below. Also check out MyFonts (see the box below) for one of the best ranges of fonts to download.

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Buy fonts from myfonts.com
Our top choice for best font identifier belongs to myfonts.com by Monotype, which offers 130,000 fonts of all kinds, including more than 900 that are completely free.

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The best font identifiers available now

01. WhatTheFont

All the designers we’ve spoken to about font identifiers point to WhatTheFont by MyFonts. It’s an optical font recognition tool. You drag an image containing the font you want to identify, crop to the words or characters you want analysed, press the button, and the results are listed.

This is the best font identifier we tested, but even here the results were rather hit and miss. For example, it recognised Adobe Caslon but couldn’t identify Roboto. Success can depend on the quality of the image – with a little coaxing it was able to identify some of the wonky type we threw at it such as Hombre, Satchmo and ITC Blackadder.

02. What Font Is?

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Created by Alexander Ciubari, an independent developer in Romania, What Font Is has been around since 2009. Today it contains profiles for over 500,000 fonts. The modus operandi is similar to WhatTheFont, and it’s easy to use, but the process takes a bit longer.

It asks you to enter the characters in the image to help it along. It performed better than WhatTheFont with common typefaces and a little worse on handmade-style type. One of our samples was a whiskey label and although WhatFontIs? didn’t identify the typeface, it did come close. It was the only one we tested that could handle a curved label.

03. Font Matcherator

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This web-based font detection tool claims to be the most robust available, but it failed to identify a single font across our test spectrum of seven images containing 10 typefaces. On the plus side, it is easy to use – you simply drag the image file over the box on the web page and Matcherator starts analysing the glyphs, Open Type outlines, and so on.

However, while refining the detection area to words or characters to improve accuracy is easy, it doesn’t seem to improve the results. In two cases, for its own reasons, Matcherator rotated the image we used 90 degrees. Fontspring only sells one of the fonts that were in our test range, and perhaps that accounts for its poor showing. Try it; you might get better results.

04. Fonts Ninja

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Here’s where things get a little more complicated. Fonts Ninja has two parts to it. First, an application that you install on your Mac. Second, an extension that works with Chrome, Safari or Firefox. When you’re browsing the web and you see a font you like, you activate the extension with an icon up by the address bar in your browser, then point the crosshair at the text you want to analyse.

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Fonts Ninja will identify the typeface and offer you the option to install it on your computer. There are 3,000 fonts in its library and if it doesn’t have an exact match it will offer something comparable – such as Kontur for Graphik. It’s free for 15 days with 20 free font installs. After that, it’s $29 per annum.

05. Identifont

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Old school. There’s no optical character recognition here. No AI that we know of. No scanning of website code either. Instead, Identifont is a questionnaire that asks you what the characters and glyphs of the font you want to identify are like and continually narrows down the options from a database of around 11,000 typefaces.

It starts off simple – serif or sans serif. As you get down to things like whether the 3 is rounded or angular, the lowercase g and a, and so on, the number of possibilities diminishes. It performed well on our sample containing a lot of characters, but if you only have a handful of letters to base your responses on it will struggle.

06. WhatFont

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WhatFont is another tool for identifying typefaces used on websites. It comes in two forms – a browser extension for Chrome and Safari, or a bookmarklet that you install by dragging a little icon into your Bookmarks panel.

If you’re using the extension, it works just like Fonts Ninja – you activate it by clicking a little icon next to the address bar in the browser then aim the crosshair at the typeface you’re interested in. It will tell you what it is, along with the size, weight and colour. WhatFont was created by iOS application engineer Chengyin Liu.

07. Fount

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Fount is a bookmarklet that you drag onto your Bookmarks sidebar and works in the same way as WhatFont. Once you’ve installed it, you click the bookmarklet, point the crosshair at the font that interests you, and a popup appears at the top right naming the font and its size, weight and style.

It will also offer you a link to a foundry or distributor selling the font. Although you can find out what font a site uses by looking at its HTML or CSS code, tools like Fount, Fonts Ninja and WhatFont make it quicker and easier each time.

Read more:

  • 10 of the best Adobe fonts
  • The best Google Fonts
  • 36 perfect font pairings

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Garrick Webster

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GarrickWebster is a freelance copywriter and branding specialist. He’s worked with major renewable energy companies such as Ecotricity and the Green Britain Group, and has helped develop award-winning branding and packaging for several distilleries in the UK, the US and Australia. He’s a former editor of Computer Arts magazine and has been writing about design, creativity and technology since 1995.

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FAQs

What is the best way to identify a font? ›

If the font you want to identify is in printed material like a magazine, you can find the name with a scanned image. Once you have a digital image, you can upload the image to a website like WhatTheFont. WhatTheFont 'reads' the font in your image and compares it to thousands it holds in its database.

What is the best font identifier from an image? ›

WhatFontIs

WhatFontIs is one of the most well-known font-identifying tools. Upload an image or paste an image URL, highlight or draw a box over the text in the image and click Next Step. You can optimize the image, such as adjusting the brightness and contrast.

Is there a font identifier app? ›

WhatTheFont works by searching through its database and comparing its fonts to the one in your image. The app will list all font matches and give you a preview of how each looks like as text. Enter your own text and play with font size for the full experience. WhatTheFont is available for both iOS and Android devices.

What is the best font finder extension for Chrome? ›

1. WhatFont. WhatFont is a great Chrome extension that can be used to identify fonts used on any website. It can quickly and accurately identify specific fonts on a page, including the font family, size, weight, and color.

Is there an easy way to find a font? ›

What the Font by Myfonts.com is a simple and easy method to search for fonts. Simply drag and drop an image onto the page, crop around the font, and let MyFonts compare the image to over 130,000 selections.

Is there a way to identify a font on a document? ›

Open a word processing application or text editor and paste (right-click with your mouse and select Paste, or press Ctrl + V on your keyboard) the text in a new document. Highlight the text again in the word processing document and look at the font option in the toolbar.

How do I search for a font on Google? ›

You can use hundreds of open-source fonts available through Google Fonts at no cost.
  1. Select the Text tool in the toolbar or open the Text panel.
  2. Click the font name in either the tool options bar or the Text panel. ...
  3. Click More fonts… at the bottom of the font menu. ...
  4. Search by entering the font name in the search field.

What font does Google use? ›

Google Sans is not available for use outside of Google. It is our brand font and is exclusively used in Google products.

Can Google identify fonts? ›

If you are using Google Chrome, right click on the mystery text, select Inspect. DevTools pops up, make sure you are on the Styles tab and head to the Font-Family attributes to learn more about the fonts.

What font is Google Chrome search? ›

Google Sans is now being used for page names and Search controls. Earlier, it was being used in case of section headers only. That said, Google hasn't completely eliminated Roboto from Search's interface. The font is still being used in case of site descriptions and other longer texts.

How do I identify a font in Word? ›

If you are viewing a document in a word processor, highlight the text and look in the toolbar at the font option. It should display what font is used in the highlighted text.

How do I identify a font in a PDF? ›

You can open the PDF file with Adobe Acrobat Reader and either press Ctrl+D on your keyboard or click on File to select Properties. You can also right-click anywhere on the PDF document to select the Properties option. Under the Fonts tab, you will find a roster of all the fonts used in that PDF file.

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