Identify any font from an image
Drop a screenshot, logo, or photo. A vision model reads the letterforms and names the font — plus 3 free alternatives you can ship with.
Try it now
Free, no signup, no upload limit. Identification in about 3 seconds.
Drop or paste the image
PNG, JPG, WebP up to 5MB. Paste from clipboard with ⌘V. Crop tightly around the text for the best result.
Vision model reads the letterforms
Terminals, axis, contrast, x-height, aperture — the same features a senior type designer would cite. Not pixel-matching.
Get the name + free alternatives
The font name and foundry when known, plus 3 Google Fonts / open-source alternatives with notes on why each one is a close match.
Image identifier vs URL inspector — which one should I use?
If you have the website URL, paste it on the homepage. Reading the live CSS returns the exact font name the browser used — there is no guessing step, so the answer is correct by construction.
If you only have an image — a screenshot from a slide deck, a printed sample, a PDF, or a brand logo where the mark isn't loaded as a webfont — use this image identifier. The vision model is trained to recognise common commercial typefaces and proposes free alternatives so you can use the look without buying a license.
For brand logos specifically (Apple, Nike, Spotify, Coca-Cola), the image identifier often beats CSS inspection because the brand's logotype is usually a custom or licensed font that doesn't appear in the website's stylesheet.
Frequently asked questions
How do I identify a font from an image?
Drop your image into the box above (or paste with ⌘V). A vision model trained on type designers reads the letterforms — terminals, axis, x-height, contrast — and returns the most likely font name, the foundry when known, and 3 free alternatives so you can ship without a license.
Is it free?
Yes. No signup, no limit, no watermark. Built on the Lovable AI Gateway so we don't sell your images and we don't bury the feature behind a paywall.
How accurate is the image-based font identifier?
For well-known typefaces (Futura, Helvetica, Inter, Spotify Circular, Coca-Cola Spencerian) it identifies them by name with high confidence. For custom or modified logotypes it returns the closest commercial family plus free alternatives, and marks confidence as 'medium' or 'low' so you know to verify.
What image types are supported?
PNG, JPG, WebP, and GIF up to 5MB. Crop tightly around the text — the more letterforms visible (lowercase 'a', 'g', 'e' are gold), the more confident the identification.
Should I use this or paste a URL?
If you have the website URL, paste it on the homepage — reading the live CSS is exact, not a guess. Use the image identifier when you only have a screenshot, a printed sample, a PDF, or a logo where the font isn't loaded as a webfont.
How is this different from WhatTheFont?
Both work from images, but WhatTheFont matches pixels against the MyFonts catalogue (commercial library). Get Font Info uses a vision model that names the font AND suggests 3 free Google Fonts / open-source alternatives — designed for designers who want to ship, not just identify.
Try it on any website
Paste a URL and Get Font Info shows you every font, weight and @font-face source — in under a second.