Free Display Fonts

Display fonts are designed to shine at large sizes - headlines, hero text, posters, logos and branding - where personality matters more than reading comfort. They range from elegant to loud. Preview these free, open-source display faces live and embed them from Fonts.Free.

Baloo 2 by Ek Type SIL Open Font License
Baloo 2
Display 5 styles variable
Oxanium by Severin Meyer SIL Open Font License
Oxanium
Display 7 styles variable
Unica One by Eduardo Tunni SIL Open Font License
Unica One
Display
Chango by Fontstage SIL Open Font License
Chango
Display
Forum by Denis Masharov SIL Open Font License
Forum
Display
Eater by Typomondo SIL Open Font License
Eater
Display
Playball by Robert Leuschke SIL Open Font License
Playball
Display
Rammetto One by Vernon Adams SIL Open Font License
Rammetto One
Display
Monoton by Vernon Adams SIL Open Font License
Monoton
Display
Audiowide by Astigmatic SIL Open Font License
Audiowide
Display
Dela Gothic One by artakana SIL Open Font License
Dela Gothic One
Display
Poiret One by Denis Masharov SIL Open Font License
Poiret One
Display
Jersey 25 by Sarah Cadigan-Fried SIL Open Font License
Jersey 25
Display
Cinzel Decorative by Natanael Gama SIL Open Font License
Cinzel Decorative
Display 3 styles
Yeseva One by Jovanny Lemonad SIL Open Font License
Yeseva One
Display
Oleo Script by soytutype fonts SIL Open Font License
Oleo Script
Display 2 styles
Goldman by Jaikishan Patel SIL Open Font License
Goldman
Display 2 styles
Averia Serif Libre by Dan Sayers SIL Open Font License
Averia Serif Libre
Display 6 styles
Bowlby One SC by Vernon Adams SIL Open Font License
Bowlby One SC
Display

Frequently asked questions

A display font is built for impact at large sizes - titles, logos, posters and hero sections - rather than long body copy. Display faces carry strong personality and distinctive shapes that stand out.

It is usually best to reserve display fonts for short, large text and pair them with a plain sans-serif or serif for paragraphs, which keeps long copy easy to read.

Yes. They are open source (OFL/Apache), free for commercial use including logos, products and client work, with no attribution required.
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