It's fair to say that free fonts aren't always the best fonts, but there are some truly brilliant ones out there if you look hard enough. Of course, looking though the mountains available takes time and effort, so we've done the work for you by collating this extensive list.

We've brought together the very best free fonts available on the web today, and you can download them right now for zero money. (In some instances, you might have to provide an email address). To help you find what you're looking for quickly and easily, we've divided them into eight categories:

One word of caution: while many of the fonts here are available for both personal and commercial use, some are strictly free for personal use only. To help you accidentally infringing a fellow designer's copyright, we've highlighted which is which, at time of publication. Permissions can change over time, of course, so please double-check the terms of use once you click through to the actual download site. And once you've got your font, if you're not sure how to use it, see our post on how to add fonts in Photoshop.

Want further typography inspiration? Also check out our fun font post, our list of medieval Old English fonts, our great collection of free retro fonts or free script fonts, and our selection of font design tips so you can create your own. Elsewhere on Creative Bloq, you'll find advice on which typefaces work together well in our guide to font pairings, and understand how to use font terminology accurately in our explanation of font vs typeface.

The best free fonts: Serif fonts

01. Cormorant

Add a touch of class to your design with this most elegant of free fonts (Image credit: Catharsis Fonts)

Developed by Christian Thalmann of Catharsis Fonts, Cormorant is one of the most elegantly formal of free fonts. It’s inspired by the 16th-century typefaces of Claude Garamont, but it’s by no means derivative. Indeed, most glyphs have been drawn from scratch, and strike a lovely balance between formality and expressiveness. This open source display font comprises 45 font files spanning nine visual styles and five weights.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

02. Alegraya

Alegreya is one of the best fonts for long text passages (Image credit: Juan Pablo del Peral )

Free fonts created for specific purposes are generally thin on the ground, but here's a great exception. Alegreya is an award-winning typeface by Argentinian designer Juan Pablo del Peral crafted with book design in mind. With a dynamic and varied rhythm aimed at facilitating the reading of long texts, it provides a fresh and approachable take on the calligraphic style.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

03. Restora

Restora is one of the best free fonts for bringing your editorial designs to life (Image credit: Nasir Udin)

In our experience, the best free fonts take a classic style and give it a twist, and here’s a great example. Designed by Nasir Udin, Restora offers a masterful combination of bright and friendly letterforms and old-style embellishment. This versatile font is suitable for book covers, editorial text, branding and more.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

04. Emberly

Emberly is ideally suited to fashion-related design projects (Image credit: Rajesh Rajput)

Another of those free fonts that feels both modern and classic, Emberly is a display font inspired by the Didone style. Created by Rajesh Rajput, it’s also available as a variable font, and would be a great option for a wide range of design projects, including logos, headlines, magazine covers and posters.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

05. Rude

Rude is one of the most beautiful free fonts we’ve seen in a long while (Image credit: Masha Chuprova)

The best fonts feel both familiar and original, and this beautifully handcrafted serif ticks both those boxes. Created by Masha Chuprova, Rude is ideal for logos, titles, magazines, headlines, apparel, posters and more.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

06. Grenze

Grenze is as punchy as it is readable (Image credit: Renata Polastri/Omnibus-Type)

Inspired by Roman and blackletter font styles, Grenze offers serious visual punch without sacrificing readability. It was created by Renata Polastri and Omnibus-Type as a font for magazines, but would work for a far wider range of design uses too.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

07. Libertinus Serif

Libertinus is one of those classic-looking free fonts that can really lift your projects (Image credit: Font Squirrel)

Looking for free fonts that can help add a touch of class to your project? Libertinus is a classic-looking serif that comes in 14 styles. It’s a fork of the Linux Libertine and Linux Biolinum fonts that address some of the bugs in those designs and has been published under the SIL Open Font Licence.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

08. Free Saint George Stencil Font

Free fonts needn’t be boring! Check out this fun and playful serif based on Georgia (Image credit: Vedran Vaskovic)

Free Saint George Stencil Font is an experimental font by Vedran Vaskovic inspired by the Christian story of Saint George, and based on the classic font Georgia. It’s one of the best fonts for adding a sense of playful fun to your designs, thanks to its wild and playful stencil shapes.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

09. Colus

Colous is one of the best free fonts around for headlines (Image credit: Stan Partalev on Font Fabric)

Colus is a free display font inspired by stone and wooden carved letter inscriptions. It has a classical, almost noble appearance and is great for creating imposing headlines, adding a touch of class to logos and introducing sophistication to poster designs.

Free for personal use

DOWNLOAD HERE

10. Amagro

Is your search for free fonts focused on all-caps serifs? Then check out Amagra (Image credit: Fabio Servolo)

Amagro is an all caps serif typeface brought to the design community by Fabio Servolo. It has strong angular serifs that make it perfect for imposing newspaper style headlines. A classy ampersand and neat easy-to-read numerics also mean it's ideal for getting your designs noticed.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

11. Poly

Poly is legible on the web even at smaller sizes (Image credit: Nicolás Silva)

Poly is a medium contrast serif font for web use. It was designed by Nicolás Silva to give increased legibility than other web serifs, even at smaller point sizes. It achieves this with a vertical emphasis, utilising short ascenders and a very high x-height to ensure clarity.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

12. Bitter

This serif font is designed to work well on screens (Image credit: Huerta Tipográfica)

Sans-serif fonts tend to work better for screen use, but this free slab serif typeface has been specially designed to provide a comfortable reading experience on screens. Bitter was designed by Sol Matas, and is available through Argentinian type collaborative Huerta Tipográfica.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

13. Playfair Display

This free font family is an open source project (Image credit: Claus Eggers Sørensen/Font Squirrel)

Designed by Claus Eggers Sørensen. this free display font takes inspiration from the 18th century Enlightenment and the work of John Baskerville. Its high-contract letterforms have delicate hairlines, relating to the rise of pointed steel pens, which took over from broad nib quills during this period.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

14. Lora

Brushed curves contrast with driving serifs in this free font (Image credit: Cyreal/Font Squirrel)

Lora was originally designed for type foundry Cyreal in 2011, with a Cyrillic extension added in 2013, and comes in four styles. Brushed curves contrast with driving serifs for a well-balanced, contemporary feel. Although technically optimised for use on the web, it's one of the best fonts for print projects too.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

15. Butler

Image 1 of 2 Free font Butler brings a sense of modernism to the serif Image 2 of 2

Inspired by both Dala Floda and the Bodoni family, Butler is a free font designed by Fabian De Smet. His aim was to bring a bit of modernism to serif fonts by working on the curves of classical serif fonts, and adding an extra stencil family.He suggests it would work well for “posters, very big titles, books and fancy stuff”.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

16. Crimson Text

Crimson Text is a free font family inspired by old-time book typefaces (Image credit: Sebastian Kosch)

Not many free fonts are created specifically for book production, but here's a great one, inspired by old-time, Garamond-esque book typefaces. Crimson Text is the work of German-born, Toronto-based designer Sebastian Kosch, who says he was influenced by the work of Jan Tschichold, Robert Slimbach and Jonathan Hoefler.

It’s a favourite free font of Taylor Palmer, a senior UX designer based in Utah, USA. "Crimson is a sophisticated serif that makes a nice alternative to traditional Garamond-esque typefaces,” he says. “It also has a very expressive italic, which pairs nicely with strong, geometric sans-serifs like Futura or Avenir."

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

17. Aleo

Aleo is one of those rare free fonts that manages to perfectly balance personality with legibility (Image credit: Graphic Pear)

Aleo has semi-rounded details and a sleek structure, giving a sense of personality while maintaining a good level of legibility. This family of free fonts was designed by Alessio Laiso, a designer at IBM Dublin, as the slab serif companion to Lato.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

18. Libre Baskerville

Free font Libre Baskerville is optimised for reading body text on screen (Image credit: Impallari Type)

Libre Baskerville is a web font optimised for body text (typically 16px). It’s based on the American Type Founder's Baskerville from 1941, but it has a taller x-height, wider counters and a little less contrast, allowing it to work well for reading on screen. This open source project is led by Impallari Type.

"I like to keep my eye on the Libre fonts, like Libre Baskerville,” enthuses Taylor Palmer, a senior UX designer based in Utah, USA. He also recommends you check out its sister font, Libre Franklin, which is also free. “Libre Franklin hearkens back to strong, traditional typefaces, like Franklin Gothic, that have the declarative nature of something like a newspaper headline but are simple enough to set as paragraph text," he explains.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

19. Slabo

A modern serif font tuned to pixel perfection (Image credit: Google Fonts)

Designed by John Hudson, Slabo is a growing collection of size-specific free fonts for the web, fine-tuned precisely for use at those specific pixel sizes. The blocky feel of its ligatures give a modern twist to the serif font, making Slabo perfect for online designs.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

20. Merriweather

Merriweather is featured on more than 3,000,000 websites, according to Google Fonts (Image credit: Google Fonts)

A truly open source free serif font, Merriweather has its own project on GitHub. It was designed by Sorkin Type to be easy to read on screens. It features a very large x-height, slightly condensed letterforms, a mild diagonal stress, sturdy serifs and open forms.

Free for personal and commercial use

DOWNLOAD HERE

Next page: Free sans-serif fonts