
How to Choose Typography for My Brand (A Simple Guide)
If you’ve ever wondered “how to choose typography for my brand,” you’re not alone. Fonts shape first impressions; they signal personality, set hierarchy, and quietly guide how people read and feel on your site. However, picking a few pretty typefaces isn’t enough. You also need a system—pairings, sizes, and rules—so your typography looks intentional everywhere, not just on a moodboard. In this guide, I’ll show you a calm, simple method to pick fonts that feel like you and actually work in the real world.
Why Typography Matters More Than You Think
Typography is visual voice. It reflects who you are before anyone reads a single sentence. Moreover, it affects credibility, readability, and conversion. When your fonts match your message, your brand feels coherent; when they don’t, visitors sense friction—even if they can’t explain why.
You’ll know typography is working when:
✅ Headlines and body copy are easy to scan.
✅ The tone (friendly, expert, refined, playful) matches your positioning.
✅ Buttons, forms, and captions feel consistent across pages and platforms.
For deeper context on how type supports identity, you might also like The Role of Typography in Building a Strong Brand Identity.
How to Choose Typography for My Brand: A Simple Method
This method is fast, practical, and kind to decision fatigue. Move step by step; don’t skip the tests.
1️⃣ Name your brand mood in three words
Choose three words that describe your brand’s feel (e.g., calm, modern, grounded). Because these words will guide every choice, keep them visible while you test fonts.
2️⃣ Pick a trustworthy body font first
Body text does the heavy lifting. Therefore, start with readability.
- Sans-serifs (e.g., Inter, Source Sans, Graphik) feel modern and clean.
- Serifs (e.g., Freight Text, Source Serif, Georgia) feel editorial and classic.
- Humanist sans (e.g., Myriad, Calibri, Work Sans) balance warmth and clarity.
⚠️ Quick checks: lowercase “a,” numerals, punctuation, and diacritics (especially if you publish in Spanish and German). Additionally, test the font at 16–18 px with 1.5–1.7 line-height.
3️⃣ Choose a headline font that complements—not competes
Now pick a display or headline font that adds personality without hurting legibility. You can:
- Contrast: serif body + sans headline (or the opposite).
- Cousins: two fonts from the same superfamily (e.g., Source Sans + Source Serif).
- One family, multiple weights: simpler to maintain; still expressive.
👉🏼 Rule of thumb: One bold move at a time—weight, style or width. Otherwise, the layout feels loud.
4️⃣ Define roles and hierarchy (so your type behaves)
Create a small, reusable type scale:
- H1: 40–56 px (weight: bold/semibold)
- H2: 28–40 px
- H3: 22–28 px
- Body: 16–18 px (regular)
- Caption/Meta: 12–14 px
Then set spacing rules: line-height, letter-spacing for all headings, and paragraph spacing (e.g., 24 px after paragraphs). Consequently, every page will feel consistent—no matter who edits it.
5️⃣ Add a single expressive accent (optional)
If your brand needs a touch of character (e.g., a script for quotes or a condensed sans for labels), restrict it to one use case: pull quotes, numbers, or big callouts. Otherwise, visual noise creeps in.
6️⃣ Test accessibility early
Readability is non-negotiable. Therefore:
- Check color contrast for text/background (aim for WCAG AA).
- Increase line-height and letter-spacing if text feels dense.
- Avoid long lines (60–80 characters per line is a good range).
- Ensure focus states and link styles are visible and consistent.
7️⃣ Stress-test on real content
Paste your actual headlines, product names, and CTAs into a quick mock. Then test: long words, names with accents, dates, prices, and bulleted lists. Meanwhile, open your site on mobile; see how the scale translates.
8️⃣ Document your rules in a mini type guide
Save your decisions in a one-pager: fonts, weights, sizes, spacing, examples, and “never use” notes. Consequently, your brand stays consistent across website, decks, and social.
Serif or Sans? Here’s How to Decide
👉🏼 Choose serif if you want editorial, classic, or literary energy. It communicates depth and thoughtfulness.
👉🏼 Choose sans if you want modern, minimal, and digital-first clarity. It communicates simplicity and speed.
👉🏼 Mix with intention if you want both: try a refined serif for headlines and a humanist sans for body text.
💡 Pro tip: Instead of chasing trends, choose the pace you want your brand to speak. Serifs slow the rhythm; geometric sans speed it up. Use that to your advantage.
Pairing Examples (With Clear Roles)
Modern consultant
- Headline: a geometric sans (e.g., Poppins Semibold)
- Body: a humanist sans (e.g., Work Sans Regular)
- Why: crisp yet friendly; excellent on screens; easy multi-language support.
Boutique studio
- Headline: a refined serif (e.g., Cormorant Garamond Semibold)
- Body: a clean sans (e.g., Source Sans Regular)
- Why: editorial personality in headlines; efficient body readability.
Wellness brand
- Headline: rounded sans (e.g., Quicksand Semibold)
- Body: humanist serif (e.g., Alegreya Regular)
- Why: soft tone + approachable reading experience; works well with calming imagery.
Avoid These Typography Mistakes (Fast Fixes)
❌ Too many fonts: cap it at 2 (3 if the third is an accent with strict limits).
❌ No hierarchy: define a scale; don’t style H2 and H3 the same.
❌ Tight line-height: give body copy room to breathe.
❌ Invisible links: always add a distinct color and hover state.
❌ All caps everywhere: use sparingly; pair with generous letter-spacing.
If you’re aligning typography to your wider system, Why Your Website Must Match Your Branding is a helpful follow-up. And for voice alignment, explore Brand Voice 101: Find the Right Tone for Your Brand.
Quick Worksheet: Choose Your Fonts in 15 Minutes
- Write your three mood words.
- Pick a body font and test paragraphs at 16–18 px, 1.6 line-height.
- Select a headline font that adds character and stays readable.
- Define H1–H3 + body + caption sizes and spacing.
- Set link styles (color, underline, hover) and button label size.
- Test numbers, dates, accents, and long words.
- Check contrast and line length on mobile and desktop.
- Document everything in a one-page type guide.
- Share the guide with collaborators.
- Revisit quarterly; then adjust only if the brand shifts.
FAQs
Can I use free fonts?
Yes—many are excellent. However, test legibility, language support, and licensing terms. Google Fonts offers reliable options with broad coverage.
What if I love a display font that’s hard to read?
Use it sparingly for big headlines or callouts, and pair it with a very readable body font. Balance beauty with clarity.
Do I need different fonts for web and print?
Not necessarily. But you may set different sizes and spacing per medium. Consistency comes from roles, not from forcing identical settings everywhere.
Typography is not just aesthetic—it’s how your brand speaks on every page. When you choose fonts with intention and give them clear roles, your site instantly feels more confident, more readable, and more “you.” As a result, visitors stay longer, understand faster, and trust more.
If you want typography that looks beautiful and behaves beautifully, I can help. ✨ Explore my Brand Identity Design and Web Design approach on the services page — we’ll turn your voice into a type system that works everywhere.
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