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20 Best Fonts for Presentations In 2024 [PowerPoint or Not]

20 Best Fonts for Presentations In 2024 [PowerPoint or Not]

Written by: Chloe West

An illustration of a person placing a star on one of four A's in different fonts.

Choosing the best font for your presentation can mean the difference between an engaged audience and one that’s confused or distracted. A presentation font needs to be legible, agreeable, and not interfere with the content itself.

But choosing a font isn’t always straightforward.

To save you time and effort, we’ve selected 25 of the best fonts for presentations. This list will help you find the best font for your next presentation, whether you’re using PowerPoint, Google Slides, Keynote or any other tool to create it.

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Choose the font that you like from the list below and see when (and if) you should use it. And the best part? Each of these, and 500 more fonts are available for free in Visme's presentation maker .

Browse thousands of presentation templates to get started or tap into the power of Visme's AI presentation maker .

Here's a short selection of 8 easy-to-edit Presentation templates you can edit, share and download with Visme. View more below:

presentation for font

26 Best Fonts for Presentations 

  • Archivo Black
  • Libre-Baskerville
  • Abril Fatface
  • League Spartan
  • Playfair Display
  • DM Serif Display
  • Dela Gothic One

Presentation Font #1: Lato

The font Lato.

We’ve all seen a million and two presentations using standard fonts like Arial and Times New Roman. Lato often serves as a default font choice in many cases. This sans-serif typeface offers a more contemporary appearance.

Plus, the variety of weights that Lato is available in – from thin to light to bold and more – helps to ramp up this font’s overall appeal.

This font can be used in a variety of different ways, as we’ll see in the presentation templates below.

In this presentation below, we see Lato used as the header font in each slide. It’s paired with a thicker serif font to create a nice balance between the two types of fonts.

A purple, blue and white pitch deck using the presentation font Lato.

Here’s another presentation example using Lato as the main header. Both of these examples are using Lato Light to create a more sleek and modern look in their slide decks.

A red, white and blue pitch deck using the font Lato.

However, as we see in the above presentation, Lato’s normal and bold weights work perfectly for offsetting the light in various headings and designs.

Lato is a modern and readable font, making it perfect for nearly any type of presentation. However, it works perfectly for conveying your professionalism in a pitch deck as well, like we’ve shown you in these examples.

Presentation Font #2: Roboto

The font Roboto.

Another great font to use in your presentations is Roboto. Roboto is yet another basic sans serif font that works across a variety of industries and types of presentations .

Roboto is a suitable font to use for your body text, like we see below in this presentation.

A white, green and red pitch deck template using the font Roboto.

All of the main body paragraphs are easy to read in Roboto, as well as professional and well designed.

We see Roboto used again below in this presentation sharing workout apps.

A fitness presentation using the font Roboto.

Here, it’s also used as the main font for body copy within the presentation. This just goes to show that this font can be used for nearly any type of presentation as well as any industry.

Roboto also pairs well with many other fonts, whether a serif like Garamond, a sans serif like Gill Sans or a script like Pacifico.

Presentation Font #3: Bentham

The font Bentham.

Bentham is a stunning serif font that works perfectly as a header font in your business presentations . It’s easy to read and gives your presentation a more traditional look and feel.

We use the Bentham font in our simple presentation theme, as you can see below.

Our Simple presentation theme using the serif font Bentham.

This font can be used as uppercase, title case or even lowercase, whatever fits in best with the rest of your design. In the simple presentation theme, we have over 300 different slide styles to help you put together a unique and beautiful presentation.

Bentham is a free font that you can easily access inside Visme when creating your presentation design. Add letter spacing to create a different effect on your slides.

Pair Bentham with a sans serif font for your body copy like Open Sans (that we’ll cover shortly) or Futura .

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Presentation Font #4: Fira Sans

The font Fira Sans.

Fira Sans is a stunning font that is incredibly versatile. In fact, you can utilize Fira Sans as both your header and body font, with another font in the mix to act only as an accent font.

See what we mean in this PowerPoint template below.

A purple educational presentation template using the font Fira Sans.

While Fira Sans is used in both normal and bold weights for the majority of the slide content, we see a nice serif thrown in as well to offset the single presentation font.

We can see Fira Sans used in multiple ways in this informational presentation template below as well.

A green educational presentation template using font Fira Sans.

This gorgeous sans serif font can be used in bold, italic, underline and more, giving you a wide variety of uses for this one font selection. Give it a try in your next presentation.

Presentation Font #5: Archivo Black

The font Archivo Black

Archivo Black is a bold and strong font that looks powerful in all caps, like in the presentation example below. This font works perfectly on titles in both large and smaller sizes because it has a heavy presence.

lemon and black presentation

In this presentation, Archivo Black is paired with Work Sans, a perfectly agreeable sans serif font that is easy to read in body text and captions.

When deciding what fonts to pair together, take a look at the Font Pairs collection in the left-hand toolbar of the Visme editor. In there, you’ll find hundreds of great pairings to use in your presentations.

Presentation Font #6: Montserrat

The font Montserrat.

Montserrat is a big favorite of ours here at Visme given that a large majority of our own headings across our website are done in this font.

However, it’s one of the top font choices you can use as well for the headings on your PowerPoint slides.

Check out how we’ve used Montserrat as a header in this marketing plan presentation template.

Blue and orange marketing plan presentation template using the font Montserrat.

It’s bold and helps your slide titles and headers to stand out to your audience, letting them know exactly what to expect each time you move to a new slide.

Here’s another example where we’ve used Montserrat, but this time we’ve used a thinner version in the header.

A yellow and black marketing plan presentation template using font Montserrat.

This versatile font almost looks like a completely different typeface when you switch up its weight, giving you even more flexibility for using it across your various presentations.

As you can see, Montserrat can be the font to choose when creating a marketing or business plan presentation as it’s both professional and visually appealing.

Montserrat also pairs well with a variety of different fonts. Try a thin sans serif for a nice contrast in your next PowerPoint.

Presentation Font #7:  Open Sans

The font Open Sans.

Open Sans is a commonly used font for body paragraphs in your presentation slides due to its legibility. Because it’s a basic sans serif font, it’s the perfect way to visualize the larger pieces of text you might need to include on a slide.

Here’s a presentation template that showcases Open Sans as the main font for the body copy.

A space-themed presentation template using the font Open Sans.

However, Open Sans shouldn’t be discounted as only a paragraph typeface. In fact, you can also use it in professional presentations to help your headings stand out clearly, increasing readability.

Take a look at this stock pitch presentation that uses Open Sans as the large font for the title and headings on each page. We used Open Sans in two different weights, creating a font pair that looks balanced and unique.

stock pitch presentation template using font Open Sans.

If you’re looking for the right font to ensure your presentation is easy to read and digest, Open Sans is a great choice.

Presentation Font #8: Dosis

The font Dosis.

Dosis is another go-to presentation font for any industry. It’s a fun sans serif font with rounded edges and tall, thin letters, giving it a more futuristic look.

Here’s an example of how an industry focused presentation can use Dosis in – a slide deck for a restaurant’s marketing plan.

restaurant marketing plan presentationn template using font Dosis

In this example, Dosis is used in all caps on the title slide and in the headings on each slide. This template has added a unique design that incorporates a two-color composition that makes the font contrast with the background.

Below, we have another impressive presentation template using Dosis in a similar fashion. It’s paired here with sans serif font Source Sans Pro, providing a modern combination fit for a tech startup pitch deck.

Blue pitch deck template using the font Dosis.

Similarly, we see that Dosis works well in all caps and can be used in a variety of designs in order to make the text stand out that much more.

Presentation Font #9: Libre-Baskerville

The font Libre-Baskerville.

Another quality PowerPoint font to consider using in your presentations is Libre-Baskerville. This is a Google font that you can use for free inside many presentation software , Visme included!

Libre-Baskerville is a serif font style that can be paired with a variety of other fonts and color schemes, creating a more traditional look and feel for your presentation.

We use Libre-Baskerville in all caps as headings in our Modern presentation theme. This theme has over 800 different slide designs so you can pick and choose the ones that work best for your presentation needs.

Our Modern presentation theme using the font Libre-Baskerville.

However, this font can also be used in body paragraphs just as easily, as it’s clear and legible and easy to read.

In the presentation template below, we’ve paired Libre-Baskerville with Josefin Sans in the header, creating a classic look and feel for any presentation deck .

Purple and orange pitch deck template using font Libre-Baskerville.

Libre Baskerville is a timeless font choice that never goes out of style and adds a sleek touch to any presentation you need to create.

Presentation Font #10: Muli

The font Muli

Muli is a versatile font that looks professional in both headings and body copy. As a sans-serif font, it’s bottom-heavy, so it sits well on the line, giving a sense of control. Its roundness makes it friendly and easy to read.

This presentation uses Muli for the titles in a medium size and a lower size for small headings. The pairing of Muli with Lato works well with the colors and shapes in the rest of the design.

strategy presentation templates using Muli

Presentation Font #11: Abril Fatface

The font Abril Fatface.

If you’re looking for a bolder font that grabs attention, a slab serif like Abril Fatface might be just the font you’re looking for. This could pair nicely with a standard font like Helvetica or Verdana or a thinner serif like Georgia or Palatino.

Check out how we’ve incorporated this bold font into the headings of the below annual report presentation design.

A blue and gold annual report presentation template using font Abril Fatface.

Abril Fatface is a great font for creating eye-catching headlines on your slides, but should only be used with short headings or pieces of text. A bold font like this can be hard to read in paragraphs or longer sentences.

Look at how good this Abril Fatface looks on the 3rd slide of this presentation.

Corporate Exit Strategy Presentation

The presentation below also uses Abril Fatface for the headings on each slide. The font has so much personality that it looks beautiful on its own and placed over bold colors.

 a multi color training presentation template using the font Abril Fatface using the font Abril Fatface

If you’re looking for a slab serif font alternative, use fonts like Rockwell or a bolded Trocchi in your next Visme or PowerPoint presentation .

You could even look into custom fonts from sites like DaFont and import them into your Visme brand kit .

Presentation Font #12:  KoHo

The font KoHo.

The next font on our list is KoHo, a unique sans serif font that can be used in more playful presentations. 

Whether you’re creating a presentation for school , a video presentation to play in your office or something else entirely, KoHo can be one of the best fonts to utilize.

We incorporated KoHo into our Creative presentation theme in the various headings of each slide.

Our Creative presentation theme using the font KoHo.

This is another one of our massive presentation themes, offering hundreds of slide designs for you to choose from. However, as the name suggests, this one has a more creative and playful feel to it.

If you need to create a pitch deck for investors or a sales presentation for new clients, KoHo and the Creative theme might not be for you. 

However, if you’re embedding a slideshow onto your blog or sharing an informational presentation on SlideShare, KoHo could be a better suited choice to engage your audience.

Presentation Font #13: Helvetica 

The font Helvetica.

Helvetica is a classic sans serif font that has a very loyal fanbase, and for good reason.

As seen most clearly in capitalized texts, the upper half of the texts are quite large when compared to other san serifs fonts. 

A mobile app trends presentation template using the font Abril Fatface

This allows the Helvetica fonts to have near-symmetrical proportionality when measuring the upper and lower portions of a text. These proportions make the identification of letters easier at a distance, like in the template example above. 

This fact makes Helvetica a great font to use for headers and titles in live presentations where there may be people “sitting in the back row ” and viewing your presentation from a distance. 

To clearly communicate your main points, be sure to use Helvetica as a bold text on headings and titles.

Presentation Font #14: Cormorant

The font Cormorant.

Cormorant is a sleek and modern serif font.

We like to think of Cormorant as a good alternative for Times New Roman but with a moderate and tasteful change.

With a dynamic range of varying thicknesses, Cormorant appears to have a calligraphic feel and look while still maintaining a sense of professionalism.

A consumer behavior research presentation template using the font Cormorant

While artistic and expressive, Cormorant is still fully legible and usable in a professional environment, as you can see in this presentation template.

Our recommendation is that you choose a font color that is a complementary color to the background. This helps separate the thin portions of the font from the background.

Should the variations in thickness prove too much for your taste, consider dialing back that expression by using Cormorant in its bold format. By thickening up the thinner lines, the variations are less noticeable and may be more suitable for a given context. 

Cormorant is a modern serif font that works well in titles, headings, subtitles for subpoints or paragraphs.

Presentation Font #15: Prompt

The font Prompt

Prompt is a geometric sans serif font designed for Latin and Thai languages. Its geometric quality gives it a solid and stable feel that will give your presentation a unique look.

In this modern presentation example, Prompt appears in all titles and subheadings. It’s paired with Montserrat, another san serif with personality. These fonts together do look a bit similar to each other but balance each other out in terms of weight and thickness.

a win loss analysis report presentation using font Prompt

Choose this font specifically if you’re creating a presentation in Thai and need the words to be legible and well-balanced.

Presentation Font #16: League Spartan

The font League Spartan.

League Spartan is a simple sans serif font, that is bold, uniform and minimalistic by nature and is great for headings and titles.

Because it's hefty even with the bold setting turned off, you may want to take extra precautions when using League Spartan for paragraphs or letter bodies. 

A consulting sales pitch template using the font League Spartan.

League Spartan works great as a header for infographics or cartoon-style presentations, like in the template above. 

The purpose of an infographic is to take difficult or complex information and turn it into easy-to-remember points. The reason that League Spartan works so well with infographics is its simplicity. 

To help set the overall tone of an infographic, you can use a simplified san serif font like League Spartan. A font like this will simplify an important or complex data point and make it feel easy to understand. 

Presentation Font #17: Poppins

The font Poppins.

Poppins is a versatile and linear san serif font. 

Poppins is linear because of its strong vertical terminals, which are the end of a stroke that is not a serif. This gives the font a sense of weight and vertical authority, making it great for strong, stand-out titles and headers.

Not only is Poppins a wonderful choice for titles and headers, but it also works well for titles, text bodies and subtitles, as you can see in our presentation template below. 

A marketing budget presentation template using the font Poppins.

The linear and versatile aspects of Poppins has made this font a favorite in the business and professional world. It feels casual, yet is still very professional.

Presentation Font #18: Playfair Display

The font Playfair Display.

What can we say about Playfair Display, other than it’s an incredibly chic and fashionable serif font. 

This font has a strong box feel as most of the characters stay between the baseline and X-height. This means that most of the letters do not dip far below the line, nor do they rise above most of the other letters.

This makes Playfair Display an excellent choice for strong titles and headers, as you can see in our presentation template below.

A real estate presentation template using the font Playfair Display.

Many fonts that go after the “box look” fail at being legible from a distance. 

To avoid this problem and make the letters more pronounced, Playfair Display uses a variety of thicknesses in the stem of their letters when compared to the arms and other extensions. 

Playfair display is a classy and elegant font designed to be used as headers or titles. While it can still be used in paragraphs, you may want to limit its usage to shorter portions of your text.

Similarly sized and spaced words written in this style can be disorienting for some readers. So instead, consider using Playfair Display as a font for titles, quotes or various subtitles in your presentation.

Presentation Font #19: Raleway

The font Raleway.

Raleway is a modern sans serif font that was originally designed to be used as a lightweight font. But after its release and by popular demand, Raleway was given heavier and italicized versions for its fans to use. 

The bold and light versions of this font are extremely versatile and can be used anywhere from bold headers to lighter parts of the body in your presentations, as you can see in our presentation template below.

A consultancy presentation template using the font Raleway.

The italicized version of Raleway has slightly off-centered bowls and shoulders in certain letters. This means that the markings that are not the stem are purposefully written higher or lower than normal. 

This is a subtle artistic flair that does not influence readability. Some people find that swashes actually help increase legibility with these off-centered markings. 

Presentation Font #20: Otama

The font Otama

This type of font pairs well with a solid sans serif like Lato Light. In this presentation example, Otama and Lato Light in all caps work together to create a professional design that stands out and makes a statement.

a business agency presentation template using the font Otama

Presentation Font #21: Lora

The font Lora.

Lora is a unique serif font that was made in a contemporary style. 

Drawing its inspiration from calligraphy and traditional fonts, Lora is an excellent balance between an artistic and professional font. 

Lora has very pronounced arches leaping away from the stem of each letter. This gives the font family a more “bubbly” feel to it, while still maintaining a sense of clean professionalism.

To unleash Lora’s true artistic nature, you’ll want to turn on the italics. When italics mode is activated, each letter receives additional swashes, giving it a more hand-written feel.

If you add weight to its default thickness, Lora works well for both titles and headers and when set to its default settings, Lora truly shines as a font in paragraphs and bodies, as you can see in our presentation template below.

A portfolio presentation template using the font Lora.

Presentation Font #22: Inter

The font Inter

You can use Inter in different weights throughout a presentation or pair it with a versatile font like Lato Light to give the composition a bit of visual variety. The presentation example below uses Inter in mixed-case and Lato Light in all-caps for headings and mixed-case for body text.

a product win loss analysis presentation template using the font Inter

Presentation Font #23: Noto Sans

The font Noto Sans

Noto Sans is a basic sans serif font that makes for a great presentation font. Clean and easy to read, it can be used in a variety of different ways from slide to slide.

Take a look at this presentation template below. The main font used throughout the headers and content is Noto Sans, creating a clean and cohesive presentation design.

A project management presentation template available to customize in Visme.

The above presentation template also uses a script font for the author name on the first slide as well as another sans serif font (Poppins) for some body content.

Having a nice mixture between the two ensures the presentation isn't boring—but it's still clean and uncluttered. Poppins is another font on this list. Try mixing 2-3 different fonts from our recommended fonts to create a stunning presentation design.

Presentation Font #24: Heebo

The font Noto Heebo

Heebo is one of the more unique sans serif fonts on our list, but it works perfectly for presentation slide headers. As a thin, tall font, it works better in a larger size than it would for content.

Take a look at how we've used Heebo in this presentation template below. It remains in an all-caps format, typically for headers from slide to slide.

An onboarding presentation template using the font Heebo

We've also creatively used the font by juxtaposing it atop purple squares, helping to create a design element out of text. Consider how you can do the same thing in your presentations.

Presentation Font #25: DM Serif Display

The font Noto DM Serif Display

Our next top font is a beautifully bold serif font. DM Serif Display is a perfect header font for a more traditional presentation design. Serifs tend to seem more old-fashioned, so keep that in mind when creating your next presentation. Maybe a serif will best fit with your audience.

Take a look at this template below to see DM Serif Display in action.

A project plan presentation template available to customize in Visme.

In the above presentation, we've paired this bold serif font with a nice thin sans serif to pull the design together. Sometimes opposites attract and help you to create a beautiful presentation design that your audience will love.

Presentation Font #26: Dela Gothic One

The font Dela Gothic One

Dela Gothic One is a thick and chunky font with a strong feel. It’s ideal for headings on posters, packaging and in titles on presentations. This font has a lot of power and is best paired with a simple sans serif font or even a classic serif like Garamond for body copy.

For a bolder outcome, use Dela Gothic One in all caps, like we did in the presentation example below. Each slide includes a strong title in Dela Gothic One in a color that contrasts with the background.

a sports presentation template using the font Dela Gothic One

Ready to Create Your Next Presentation?

When it comes to fonts for PowerPoint (or any other presentation platform), there are so many options to choose from that it can get overwhelming. But selecting fonts doesn't need to stress you out. Stick to the ones in this list and you’re sure to have a winner.

Whether you use Microsoft PowerPoint , Apple Keynote or Visme, each of these presentation fonts can really bring the best out of your presentation. 

If you want to get even more out of your presentation design and have access to top notch animation, transition and interactivity capabilities, sign up for Visme's free presentation maker today .

If you're racing against the clock, take advantage of Visme’s AI features, like the AI Presentation Maker which takes a text prompt and turns it into a fully designed presentation draft.

Create beautiful presentations faster with Visme.

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About the Author

Chloe West is the content marketing manager at Visme. Her experience in digital marketing includes everything from social media, blogging, email marketing to graphic design, strategy creation and implementation, and more. During her spare time, she enjoys exploring her home city of Charleston with her son.

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12 Best Fonts For Powerpoint Presentations in 2024

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Microsoft Powerpoint can be a very helpful tool for many things such as creating slideshows, conducting presentations, and sharing information with others. Powerpoint allows users to add various features by using special effects, animations, transition effects,  fills in shapes, and much more. Because of its versatility, it has become the go-to professional presentation tool. To add to that, there are a lot of fonts and templates that you can use when in a Powerpoint presentation.

A good Powerpoint presentation is clear, consistent, and compelling, and whether you’ll be conducting a sales pitch, briefing, demo, or report, your choice and use of fonts will greatly affect the quality of your presentation.

Here are some of the best Powerpoint presentation fonts that you can use to blow away your audience, as you kick-off 2022:

How to Choose the Best Font for a Presentation

When choosing the best font for Powerpoint presentations, you have to prioritize readability and legibility to preserve the quality of your content and ensure that your message will be easily understood by your audience. Here are some tips:

1. Choose a Simple Font

Complicated fonts such as script and decorative fonts can make your design look cluttered and make it hard for your audience to read what’s on your slides. Simple fonts like serif or sans serif fonts are ideal because they are easy to read and they blend well with any kind of design.

2. Go for Sans Serif Fonts over Serif Fonts

If you have to make a choice between a serif or classic sans serif font, pick the latter. A sans serif typeface has better readability on-screen. Letterforms with serifs or additional strokes at the end of a character can sometimes look blurred on-screen, which can confuse or distract your audience and make it difficult for them to read.

3. Choose a Font That Looks Great at Both Big and Small Presentation Font Sizes

The best practice for a Powerpoint presentation is to use presentation font sizes no lower than 24 points. To maximize readability, it is important to choose a font that is not too thin nor too thick. Choose a font that will retain its clarity and quality whether it is scaled up to 120 points or down to 24 points.

4. Choose a Different Font for Your Titles and Headings

Your body font should be different from your title, heading, and subheading fonts to put proper emphasis on them and create variety and visual interest in your presentation , but remember not to use more than 4 fonts for a cohesive and visually organized design. They should also be in bold and have a bigger font size.

5. Choose Fonts That Complement Each Other

Create balance in your design and promote seamless transitions between sections of your content by choosing the perfect font pairings. Combining serif fonts are usually the best way to go. These fonts can definitely stand on their own, but they work better when they are put together.

6. Consider the Content and Tone of Your Presentation

When picking presentation fonts or trying to choose between a serif font or sans serif font for your Powerpoint, it’s important to think about content and tone. Fonts all have their own associations and “personalities.” Times New Roman is classic, for example, while a simple sans serif font like Gill Sans is more sleek and modern. Try to match the feel of the font with the nature of your Powerpoint.

Best Fonts to Use for Powerpoint

Find the best font to use for your Powerpoint presentation from Creative Market’s top presentation font picks:

1. Pelicano: Basic Sans Serif Font

This easy-to-read, monoline typeface has a simple and clean look that can give your Powerpoint presentation a more casual and approachable vibe, similar to other sans serif classics, like Gill Sans. It also has a great stroke weight that is ideal for adding colors that will draw attention to your text. Take advantage of this feature by incorporating your brand colors for better brand recognition.

2. TT Rircordi Greto: Non-Contrasting Sans Serif

Inspired by the Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence, TT Ricordi Greto is a modern sans serif font with a classic look and feel. It comes in big and small caps which makes way for the dynamic proportions and low contrast between characters. It also has a hint of a serif font style at the terminals that further contributes to its stylistic design, making it a terrific slab serif font alternative. With bold and heavy strokes, this professional-looking font is perfect for your titles and headings.

3. Coolvetica

This basic font features a playful spin on the popular sans serif fonts, Helvetica to produce an iconic and versatile font that you can use not just for formal, professional presentations but for creative designs as well. Coolvetica has 35 distinct and varied styles with 4 weights ranging from extra light to bold and heavy, which means you can use it for titles, headings, subheadings, and body text and it won’t look like the same font at all.

4. Jumper: Modern Serif Font

Like Coolvetica, this font can also be your all-in-one presentation font. Its bold and black variations with powerfully thick strokes can help you create attention-grabbing titles and headers while the thin and regular styles can make the rest of your text optimally readable and visually appealing. Jumper is an example of a geometric font which uses simple geometric shapes that make way for a softer, less robotic look.

5. Think Sans: A Varied Width Font

Think Sans is an all-caps, monoline font that comes in 4 styles with fun alternates that have varying set widths, ranging from a thin sans serif to a much wider alternative. It is a unique typeface that has rounded inner corners complemented by sharp outer corners and pairs wide and narrow characters to create eye-catching, irregularly-shaped text. This font has the right thickness for both your subheadings and body text and can even add a creative touch to your subheadings.

6. Cosmopolis: Sans Serif Font Family

From thin to extended bold, Cosmopolis font family comes in 24 rich styles that are perfect for giving your presentation a modern and sophisticated look. Similar to other sans serif fonts, some of its notable characteristics are a wide set width, tight kerning, and great x-height. This font can help you create strong titles and distinguishable headings as well as keep your body text looking neat and organized for the most beautiful presentations .

7. Maine: Book Antiqua

Moving on to presentation fonts, here’s a clean and modern font based on the roman typeface, Book Antiqua. If you want to give a professional, no-nonsense impression in your presentation, this font is the one you’re looking for. Maine is specially designed for creating more legible body text. Thanks to its clear features, high x-height, and overall simple design, this font has great readability and can easily be paired with other standard, classic fonts.

8. Isabella Grand

With style and grace, the Isabella Grand typeface is an elegant serif font that has relatively thin yet bold strokes that can give you highly readable and legible body text for your presentation. It comes in two styles; the italic style is dreamy and sultry – the perfect partner for the more serious regular style. It also has diagonal crossbars, prominent ball terminals, plus some beautiful ligatures that only accentuate its unique charm.

9. Madley: A Slab Serif Typeface

This clean-looking and beautiful font is called Madley, a contemporary slab serif typeface with monolinear stems, elongated block serifs, and teardrop terminals. From a dainty hairline weight to a thick black weight, this font family has various styles that you can use either as an accent font for your titles and headings or as your main text font.

10. BD Megalona

A modern and elegant revival of the classic Times New Roman font, BD Megalona comes in 26 styles with thin to black weights and advanced OpenType features such as stylistic alternates, swashes, ligatures, and more. Give your presentation and stylish, luxurious, and professional look by using this font to create clear body text and high-impact titles:

11. Montas: Display Serif Family

Here is a contemporary and bold font that is perfect for formal presentations. Montas has stylish features such as wide and narrow strokes, tall lowercase letters, and counters with diagonal stress. Its bolder weights are suitable for creating striking titles and headers, while the lighter weights will make great paragraph typeface.

12. Birchfield Typeface

Finally, custom fonts are a great way to combine and utilize the best features of two or even three different fonts. A great example is this spur serif font that’s made to look like a sans with its almost unnoticeable serifs. Birchield is an all-caps font with an elongated appearance that improves readability. It can be used for your headings or subheadings. Channeling a vintage aesthetic, this font can give your presentation a timeless look.

How to Apply Fonts to Your Powerpoint Presentation?

After selecting the perfect presentation fonts for your next Powerpoint, you’ll want to know how to apply them. Fortunately, the process for selecting and applying any font, whether it be a script font, popular sans serif font, or even a completely custom font, is quite simple.

Here’s how it’s done, step by step:

  • Highlight the text you want to change into a new design style. You can do this by simply dragging over it with your left mouse button held down to highlight the text. Or, to adjust the font across numerous slides, hold the “Ctrl” key and click on the Powerpoint slides you want to change.
  • Access the font dialog box by going to the “Home” tab and then clicking the little arrow in the lower right-hand corner of the “Font” menu. To access the box even faster and more conveniently, just press the “Ctrl” and “D” keys together.
  • Select the right font from the list provided to apply it to the select text or Powerpoint slides. Note that you can also take this time to adjust the font size, color, and even add effects (like an italicized version of your font). Check out the “Sample” area to see how it’ll look.
  • Last but not least, click the “OK” button to confirm your new presentation font selection.

Using Custom Presentation Fonts and Themes

The above tutorial shows you how to change to other fonts on the fly when working in Powerpoint. But what if you make a lot of presentations and want to use the best fonts Powerpoint each and every time, without having to manually change them over and over? Luckily, there’s a workaround for that, as you can set up your own themes or templates to use for all your future presentations.

Here’s how it’s done:

  • Head to the “View” tab and select “Slide Master.”
  • Select “Fonts,” followed by “Customize Fonts.”
  • In the “Create New Theme Fonts” box, choose the fonts you’d like to use for your headings and body text.
  • Type in a name for your new theme, then click the Save button.
  • Via the “Slide Master” box, you can also customize colors and effects,
  • Click “Save Current Theme” to save your theme for future use.
  • The next time you want to use that theme and load in the best font selections for your presentation, open the “Design” tab and select your saved theme from the gallery.

What Makes the Best Fonts for Powerpoint so Effective?

There are so many different fonts out there, and not all fonts are the same. The best presentation fonts have a certain air about them. They elevate Powerpoint presentations, making the content more engaging and the text more easily readable, too. That’s why many of them tend to stand out for their legibility, pleasant aesthetics, and unique ability to both stand out without drawing attention away from other parts of the presentation, like images and graphs.

Basically, using a quality Powerpoint font can help you fulfill the purpose of your presentation. Hope to see you give these Powerpoint fonts a try before the year ends!

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14 Fonts That Make Your PowerPoint Presentations Stand Out

14 Fonts That Make Your Powerpoint Presentations Stand Out

Presentation fonts, more generally known as typography , are one of the most neglected areas of presentation design .

That’s because when presentation fonts are used appropriately and correctly, they blend so well with the overall design that your audience doesn’t even notice it. Yet, when your font usage is lacking, this sticks out like a sore thumb. 

Over 30 million PowerPoint presentations are made daily. Therefore, when it comes to creating your own slide decks, you need to take every advantage you can get to make it stand out. Among other design choices, choosing the best fonts for presentations can provide a huge impact with minimal effort.

In fact, it’s one of the reasons why Steve Jobs was able to turn Apple into the brand it is today. His expertise in branding and design was fueled by the Calligraphy classes that he attended in his early years. This allowed him to find the best font family that accentuated his company’s brand and identity.

So no matter the subject of your PowerPoint presentation, the best font or font family will help you create a lasting impression and convey a powerful message. To help you shine through your next slideshow, here’s our cultivated list of the best fonts for presentations.

If you want to create a PowerPoint presentation but don’t have access to PowerPoint itself, you can use Piktochart’s presentation maker to create a presentation or slide deck and export it as a .ppt file.

Best Fonts for Presentations and PowerPoint

Before we proceed, you should know some basics of typography, especially the difference between Serif, Sans Serif, Script, and Decorative types of fonts. 

Serif Fonts

These are classic fonts recognizable by an additional foot (or tail) where each letter ends. Well-known Serif fonts include:

  • Times New Roman
  • Century 

Sans Serif Fonts

Differing from the Serif font style, Sans Serif fonts do not have a tail. The most popular Sans Serif font used in presentations is Arial, but other commonly employed renditions of Sans Serif typeface include:

  • Century Gothic
  • Lucida Sans

Script and Decorative Fonts

These are the fonts that emulate handwriting—not typed with a keyboard or typewriter. Script typefaces and decorative or custom fonts for PowerPoint vary immensely and can be created by a graphic designer to ensure these custom fonts are bespoke to your company/brand.

With these font fundamentals explained, you can also keep up-to-date with the popularity of such fonts using Google’s free font analytics tool here . Let’s now go ahead with our list of the best presentation fonts for your PowerPoint slides. 

  • Libre-Baskerville

Keep in mind that you don’t have to stick with only a single font for your slides. You could choose two of the best fonts for your presentation, one for your headings and another for the copy in the body of the slides.

Without further ado, let’s dive into the 14 best presentation fonts.

1. Helvetica

helvetica font

Helvetica is a basic Sans Serif font with a loyal user base. Originally created in 1957 , Helvetica comes from the Latin word for ‘Switzerland’ where it was born. When you use Helvetica, the top-half part of the text is bigger than in other Sans Serif fonts. For this reason, letters and numbers have a balanced proportionality between the top and bottom segments. As a result, this standard font makes it easier to identify characters from a distance.

As a result of being one of the easiest typecases to read compared to different presentation fonts, Helvetica is great for communicating major points as titles and subheadings in a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation.

For these reasons, Helvetica is a popular choice for anyone creating posters .

If you are presenting live to a large group of people, Helvetica is your new go-to font! The classic Sans Serif font is tried and tested and ensures the legibility of your slide deck, even for the audience members sitting at the very back. Though it looks good in any form, you can make Helvetica shine even more in a bold font style or all caps. 

futura font

Futura is one of the popular Sans Serif fonts and is based on geometric shapes. Its features are based on uncomplicated shapes like circles, triangles, and rectangles. In other words , it mimics clean and precise proportions instead of replicating organic script or handwriting. Futura is a great default font for presentations because of its excellent readability, elegance, and lively personality. 

As one of many standard fonts designed to invoke a sense of efficiency and progress, Futura is best employed when you want to project a modern look and feel in your presentation. Futura is a versatile option ideal for use in both titles and body content, accounting for why it has remained immensely popular since 1927. 

3. Rockwell

rockwell font, presentation font

The Rockwell font has strong yet warm characters that make it suitable for a variety of presentation types, regardless of whether it’s used in headings or the body text. However, best practice dictates that this standard font should be used in headers and subheadings based on its geometric style. Rockwell is a Geometric Slab Serif , otherwise known as a slab serif font alternative. It is formed almost completely of straight lines, flawless circles, and sharp angles. This Roman font features a tall x-height and even stroke width that provides its strong presence with a somewhat blocky feel.

Monoline and geometric, Rockwell is a beautiful font that can display any text in a way that looks impactful and important. Whether you want to set a mood or announce a critical update or event, you can’t go wrong with this robust font.

presentation font, verdana font

Verdana is easily a great choice as one of the top PowerPoint presentation fonts. Its tall lowercase letters and wide spaces contribute significantly towards boosting slide readability even when the text case or font size is small. That’s why Verdana is best for references, citations, footnotes, disclaimers, and so on. Additionally, it can also be used as a body font to extrapolate on slide headings to nail down your key points.

Besides that, it is one of the most widely available fonts, compatible with both Mac and Windows systems. This makes this modern Sans Serif font a safe bet for when you are not certain where and how will you be delivering your presentation. 

raleway font, presentation font

Raleway is a modern and lightweight Sans Serif font. Its italicized version has shoulders and bowls in some letters that are a bit off-centered. What this means is that the markings excluding the stem are intentionally lower or higher as compared to other fonts. 

This gives Raleway a slightly artistic look and feels without impacting its readability (and without falling into the custom or decorative fonts category). In fact, many professionals think the swashes and markings actually enhance the font’s readability and legibility. Moreover, Raleway also has a bold version which is heavily used in presentations and slide decks. 

The bottom line is that Raleway is a versatile typeface that can be used in a variety of presentations, either in the body copy or in titles and subheadings. When the titles are capitalized or formatted as bold, captivating your audience becomes a breeze. 

6. Montserrat

montserrat font, presentation font

Montserrat is one of our favorite PowerPoint fonts for presentation titles and subheadings. The modern serif font is bold, professional, and visually appealing for when you want your headers and titles to really capture the audience’s attention.

Every time you move to the next slide, the viewers will see the headings and instantly understand its core message.  

Another major quality of the Montserrat font is its adaptability and versatility. Even a small change, such as switching up the weight, gives you an entirely different-looking typeface. So you get enough flexibility to be able to use the font in all types of PowerPoint presentations.

Montserrat pairs nicely with a wide range of other fonts. For example, using it with a thin Sans Serif in body paragraphs creates a beautiful contrast in your PowerPoint slides. For this reason, it is usually the first modern Serif font choice of those creating a business plan or marketing presentation in MS PowerPoint. 

presentation font roboto, roboto font

Roboto is a simple sans-serif font that is a good fit for PowerPoint presentations in a wide range of industries. Well-designed and professional, Roboto works especially well when used for body text, making your paragraphs easy to read.

Roboto combines beautifully with several other fonts. When you’re using Roboto for body text, you can have headings and titles that use a script font such as Pacifico, a serif font such as Garamond, or a Sans Serif font such as Gill Sans. 

bentham presentation font

Bentham is a radiant serif font perfectly suited for headings and subtitles in your PowerPoint slides. It gives your presentation a traditional appearance, and its letter spacing makes your content really easy to read.

You can use this font in uppercase, lowercase, or title case, depending on how it blends with the rest of your slide. For best results, we recommend combining Bentham with a Sans Serif font in your body content. For example, you can use a font such as Open Sans or Futura for the rest of your slide content.

9. Libre-Baskerville

libre baskerville, libre baskerville font

Libre-Baskerville is a free serif Google font. You can pair this classic font with several other fonts to make a PowerPoint presentation with a traditional design. 

One of its best features is that it works equally well in both headings and body copy. It’s clear and easily readable, no matter how you use it. And when used for headings, it works really well in uppercase form. 

tahoma powerpoint font, tahoma font

Tahoma is one of the fonts that offer the best level of clarity for PowerPoint slides. It has easily distinguishable characters like Verdana, but with the exception of tight spacing to give a more formal appearance.

Designed particularly for screens, Tahoma looks readable on a variety of screen sizes and multiple devices. In fact, this significant aspect is what makes Tahoma stand out from other fonts in the Sans Serif family. 

11. Poppins

poppins powerpoint font, poppins font

Poppins falls within the Sans Serif font category but is a different font of its own uniqueness. The solid vertical terminals make it look strong and authoritative. That’s why it’s great for catchy titles and subheadings, as well as for the body paragraphs. Poppins is a geometric typeface issued by Indian Type Foundry in 2014. It was released as open-source and is available in many font sizes for free on Google Fonts.

When you want something that feels casual and professional in equal measure, pick Poppins should be in the running for the best PowerPoint fonts. 

12. Gill Sans 

gill sans presentation font, gill sans font

Gill Sans is another classic presentation font for when you’re looking to build rapport with your audience. Gill Sans is a friendly and warm Sans Serif font similar to Helvetica. At the same time, it looks strong and professional. 

It’s designed to be easy to read even when used in small sizes or viewed from afar. For this reason, it’s a superior match for headers, and one of the best PowerPoint fonts, especially when combined with body text using Times New Roman or Georgia (not to mention several other fonts you can pair it with for successful results). This is the right font for combing different fonts within a presentation.

13. Palatino

palatino presentation font, palatino font

Palatino can be classified as one of the oldest fonts inspired by calligraphic works of the 1940s. This old-style serif typeface was designed by Hermann Zapf and originally released in 1948 by the Linotype foundry. It features smooth lines and spacious counters, giving it an air of elegance and class. 

Palatino was designed to be used for headlines in print media and advertising that need to be viewable from a distance. This attribute makes Palatino a great font suitable for today’s PowerPoint presentations.   

Palatino is also a viable choice for your presentation’s body text. It’s a little different from fonts typically used for body paragraphs. So it can make your presentation content stand out from those using conventional fonts. 

14. Georgia

georgia ppt presentation font, georgia font

Georgia typeface has a modern design that few fonts can match for its graceful look. It’s similar to Times New Roman but with slightly larger characters. Even in small font size, Georgia exudes a sense of friendliness; a sense of intimacy many would claim has been eroded from Times New Roman through its overuse. This versatile font was designed by Matthew Carter , who has successfully composed such a typeface family which incorporates high legibility with personality and charisma. Its strokes form Serif characters with ample spacing, making it easily readable even in small sizes and low-resolution screens. 

Another benefit of using this modern font is its enhanced visibility, even when it’s used in the background of your PowerPoint slides. Moreover, the tall lowercase letters contribute to a classic appearance great for any PowerPoint presentation.  

Final Step: Choosing Your Best Font for Presentations

Choosing the right PowerPoint fonts for your future presentations is more of a creative exercise than a scientific one. Unless you need to abide by strict branding guidelines and company policies, there are no rules for the ‘best font’ set in stone. Plus, presentation fonts depend entirely on the environment or audience it is intended for, the nature and format of the project, and the topic of your PowerPoint presentation. 

However, there are certain basic principles rooted in typography that can help you narrow down the evergrowing list of available PowerPoint presentation fonts and choose PowerPoint fonts that will resonate with and have a powerful impact on your target audience.

As discussed in this article, these include font factors such as compatibility with most systems, clarity from a distance, letter spacing, and so on. Luckily for you, our carefully researched and compiled list of best fonts for presentations above was created with these core fundamentals already in mind, saving you time and hassle.

As long as you adopt these best practices for standard fonts without overcomplicating your key message and takeaways, you’ll soon be on your way to designing a brilliant slide deck using a quality PowerPoint font or font family! From all of us here at Piktochart, good luck with your new and improved presentation slides that will surely shine!

If you want to spend less time designing from scratch, consider giving our AI presentation maker a try! From a single prompt, it will generate dozens of templates for you to choose from, along with suggested text and relevant images or charts and graphs. From there, you can pick the most suitable template and tweak it as you need, including color palettes and the text. Not to mention, picking the best font to make your message shine.

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50+ Best Fonts for PowerPoint Presentations

Picking the right font for your presentation is probably the most important part of designing a PowerPoint slideshow. If your font isn’t readable, you’ll have a confused audience. We explored the web to find this collection of the best fonts for PowerPoint presentations to help you choose the best font for your slideshow design.

When designing a PowerPoint presentation it’s easier to just pick a font from the default fonts collections installed on your computer and just finish making the slides. But, a unique, custom font can help you create a winning presentation that shows off professionalism.

Choosing a unique font with the right weight and creative design will allow you to not only design a presentation that looks more original, but also to quickly attract the attention of your audience.

In this collection, we’re featuring some of the best fonts you can use to design professional slides for all kinds of PowerPoint presentations from business to startup pitch decks, school presentations, and much more.

We’re also featuring a few helpful tips for choosing a presentation font to help get you started.

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Config – Complete Font Family (40 Fonts)

Config Complete Font Family

Unlike most other font families, Config is a complete font family made just for professional designers and creatives. This font family comes with a total of 40 fonts.

Config includes 40 fonts in 8 different styles and in 10 weights. You also get italics, ligatures, alternatives, and much more with this font pack.

Why This Is A Top Pick

This is truly a special font pack that will help you design not only professional presentations but also many other types of print and digital designs. With 40 fonts, you’ll have plenty of options to choose from.

Devant Horgen – Modern Font for PowerPoint

Devant Horgen - Modern Font for PowerPoint

This is one of the best fonts for presentations that features a tall and bold letter design that’s simply perfect for crafting titles for your slides. The font also comes in two different styles featuring glyphs, multilingual support, and web fonts.

Jungle East – Font For PowerPoint Titles

Jungle East - Font For PowerPoint Titles

The quirky and simple design of this font makes it a great choice for PowerPoint presentations. It’s especially ideal for presentations about casual and lifestyle topics. The font features all-caps letters with lots of creative alternate characters.

Lost Signal – Font Duo for PowerPoint

Lost Signal - Best Fonts for PowerPoint

With this font, you get a two-in-one deal as it comes with two unique fonts. It includes a regular font and an outline version that you can pair to craft attractive titles and designs for your presentations and various other projects.

Apple Juice – Fun Font for Presentations

Apple Juice - Fun Font for Presentations

Apple Juice is a fun font that will fit in great with presentations related to kids, education, schools, and more. It features uppercase and lowercase characters along with multilingual support.

Vistol Black – Free Font for Presentations

Vistol Black - Free Font for Presentations

Vistol Black is a free font that comes with a very clean and professional letter design. It’s great for all your business and corporate presentations, especially for designing titles that grab attention.

Meribold – Modern Font for Presentations

Meribold - Modern Font for Presentations

This font has one of the coolest-looking letter designs that will make your titles and headings look extra sharp on presentation slideshows. It has bold letters with thick strokes to instantly grab your audience’s attention.

PlainScribe – Clean Font for PowerPoint

PlainScribe - Clean Font for PowerPoint

This font comes in two different styles featuring a regular and outline version, along with italics for both fonts. You can combine these two fonts to create attractive titles and text for PowerPoint presentations.

Handcraft Chalk Font for Presentations

Handcraft Chalk Font for Presentations

If you’re going with a chalkboard-style handcrafted look for the presentations, then this font is a must-have for your project. It has a chalk-style letter design with a set of all-caps characters.

BRIGHTONS – Bold Title Font for PowerPoint

BRIGHTONS - Bold Title Font for PowerPoint

Brightons is a bold title font family that includes 16 different fonts with different weights. It’s a fantastic choice for designing big headings and titles for your PowerPoint slides that stand out.

Open Runde – Free Sans Font for PowerPoint

Open Runde - Free Sans Font for PowerPoint

This free font has a very casual and clean letter design featuring rounded edges and beautifully smooth characters. You can use it to craft both titles and paragraphs for presentations. And it’s free to use with commercial projects.

Leading – Bold Sans Serif Font for PowerPoint

Leading - Bold Sans Serif Font for PowerPoint

Leading is a modern sans-serif font that features a set of clean and thick letters. The font is perfect for adding attention-grabbing titles to your slideshows and presentations.

Chalk Brush – Creative Font for Presentations

Chalk Brush - Creative Font for Presentations

This font combines two different styles of fonts to create a unique look. It takes elements from brush and chalk-style fonts to offer a unique handwritten letter design, which you can add to your own PowerPoint presentations.

Milkyway – Playful Font for PowerPoint

Milkyway - Playful Font for PowerPoint

The retro and groovy design of this font will make any presentation stand out from the crowd. It features a fun and playful letter design that is ideal for all your PowerPoint slideshows related to casual and entertaining topics.

Sans Block – Handwritten Font for PowerPoint

Sans Block - Handwritten Font for PowerPoint

If you’re looking for a font with a more personalized handwritten look, then this font is perfect for your presentations. It features a thin and minimalist letter design that’s especially suitable for school and educational slideshow designs.

RL Madena – Free Font for Presentations

RL Madena - Free Font for Presentations

This font is also free to download and it comes with an elegant serif letter design. It will make your typography look extra stylish in fashion and lifestyle-related presentations. The font is free for commercial use.

San Marino – Urban Font Family for Presentations

San Marino - Urban Font Family for Presentations

San Marino is another professional font that features clean-cut geometric letters. This font comes in 4 styles for you to choose from. And it’s suitable for business, lifestyle, and creative PowerPoint slideshow designs.

Kod Hulling – Rounded Fonts for PowerPoint

Kod Hulling - Rounded Fonts for PowerPoint

Want to add a casual and friendly look to your presentation slides? Then use this font to craft your slides with a classic look. The font comes with a very unique design featuring both uppercase and lowercase letters.

Miracle World – Elegant Font for Presentations

Miracle World - Elegant Font for Presentations

This font has the perfect design for crafting titles in presentations for luxury businesses and elegant lifestyle brands. It includes lots of stylistic characters and ligatures to help you design unique titles and designs for your slideshows.

Action Hero – Brush Font for PowerPoint Titles

Action Hero - Brush Font for PowerPoint Titles

With this brush font, you can design attention-grabbing titles for your fun and casual presentations. It has an 80’s action movie-themed letter design that comes with a set of cool all-caps letters. And with lots of alternate characters.

Quanty – Free Modern Font for PowerPoint

Quanty - Free Modern Font for PowerPoint

This free font is also great for designing titles in your PowerPoint slides. It has a simple and clean letter design that will add an extra-professional look to your presentation. The font is free to use with personal projects.

Indigo – Chunky Font Duo

Indigo - Chunky Font Duo

Indigo is a modern and creative font that features a bold and thick character design. This font is ideal for designing titles and the headers of your presentations. It comes in both regular and outline styles.

Maximum Profit – Business Presentation Font

Font for PowerPoint Presentations

If you’re creating a business explainer PowerPoint presentation, Maximum Profit will help you hit a home run. It comes with a full set of uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, punctuation, multilingual support, and more. Try it out today!

Mosra – PowerPoint Presentation Font

Font for PowerPoint Presentations

Looking for a typeface that feels right at home on virtually any kind of PowerPoint presentation? Mosra is a solid font choice that will help you create a presentation that stands out from the pack. We recommend you choose Mosra for your upcoming pitch deck or add it to your shortlist at the very least.

Cornerone – Corporate Presentation Font

Font for PowerPoint Presentations

Say hello to Cornerone, a simple, round typeface that will add a vintage flair to your presentation, and take it to a whole new level. Available in bold and regular styles, and cyrillic, and latin alphabets, Cornerone provides a surprising amount of creative control in your hands.

Cholens – Free Sans-serif Font

Font for PowerPoint Presentations

Modern, and classy, Cholens is a rounded sans-serif font that can be a solid choice for PowerPoint presentations of any kind. It contains uppercase and lowercase letters and is available for you to download without spending a penny. Get it now.

Mike Sans – Square Font

Mike Sans - Square Font

Mike Sans is a sans-serif font family that features a unique square and slightly rounded character design. The font includes 8 weights ranging from thin to heavy. It’s ideal for both title and paragraph text designs of presentations.

Metropolis – Font Family

Metropolis

Metropolis is an elegant serif font family that comes with a mix of modern and vintage design elements. It features a design inspired by the 1927 Fritz Lang movie of the same name. This font is perfect for crafting business and professional presentation slideshows.

RNS Miles – Geometric Sans Font

RNS Miles - Geometric Sans Font

RNS Miles is a modern sans-serif font featuring an attractive design. It’s been crafted with a combination of “geometric shapes, open forms, and grotesque mood”, which gives the font a unique look. The font includes 7 different weights with 7 italic versions of the font.

CA Texteron – Six Weight Text Font

CA Texteron - Six Weight Text Font

Texteron is a professional font that comes in 6 different weights, including bold, heavy, and small caps font styles. The font features an elegant design that makes it perfect for designing the paragraph text of your PowerPoint slides.

Peace Sans – Free Presentation Font

Peace Sans - Free Presentation Font

Peace Sans is a bold display font with thick character design. This font is most suitable for designing titles and headers of your presentations. It’s free to use with your personal projects.

Univia Pro – Free Font Family

Univia Pro - Free Font Family

Univia Pro is a family of sans-serif fonts that features multiple font weights ranging from thick to bold designs. You can use it to design both titles and body text of your presentations.

Italo – Creative Font

Italo - Creative Font

Italo is a creative sans-serif handwritten font that comes with a unique design. It’s most suitable for designing PowerPoint slides for entertaining, fun, and creative presentations. The font also includes lots of glyphs and alternate characters as well.

Brother Typeface

Brother Typeface

Brother is a yet another creative font that comes with a bold design, making it best for using to design the titles of your slides. The font comes with both uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, and punctuations.

Vistol – Free Sans Serif Font Family

Vistol - Free Sans Serif Font Family

Vistol is a free font family that features a set of clean and minimalist sans serif characters. The font includes 9 different font weights ranging from thin to extra bold and black.

This font is ideal for designing both titles and body text of your presentations as it includes both uppercase and lowercase letters.

The simple and attractive character design gives this font family a special place on our list. It’s also completely free to use with your personal and commercial projects.

Cansu – Free PowerPoint Font

Font for PowerPoint Presentations

While you’ll find a number of freebies on our list, when it comes to choosing the one that we like the most, Cansu definitely takes the cake. With an air of minimalism, the font is perfectly suited for a variety of presentation formats.

Addington CF – Serif Font Family

Addington CF - Serif Font Family

Addington is a family of serif fonts that feature a very formal design. It’s perfect for designing PowerPoint slides for business and professional presentations. The font comes with 7 different font weights including roman and italic sets.

Avera Sans – Font Family

Avera Sans - Font Family

Avera is a unique family of sans-serif fonts that comes in 3 different styles, a brush font, a handcrafted style font, and a sketch style font. This font family will come in handy when designing many different types of slideshow presentations.

Calama – Free Condensed Font

Calama - Free Condensed Font

Calama is a free font that comes with a narrow condensed design. This type of fonts is best not to be used as your body text font. But it will make your titles look great.

Mathison – Free Modern Display Font

Mathison - Free Modern Display Font

Mathison is a free serif font that has a unique design of its own. This font is perfect for crafting unique headers and sub-headers in your presentations. It’s free to use with personal and commercial projects.

Cormier – Art Deco Font

Cormier - Art Deco Font

Cormier is a creative font that comes with an art deco inspired design. It includes 3 styles of fonts: Rough, Double, and Regular. The font features all-uppercase letters, numbers, and punctuations.

Metrisch – Sans-Serif Font Family

Metrisch - Sans-Serif Font Family

Metrisch is a minimalist sans-serif font that features an elegant design. The font comes in 7 different weights to match both the titles and text in your slides. It’s most suitable for making slides related to business and professional projects.

Frank – Modern Font Family

Frank - Modern Font Family

Frank is a bold font that comes with a modern design. It includes 4 different fonts, including oblique and rough styles. And the fonts are available in 5 different weights, making a total of 20 fonts.

Bistro – Handcrafted Font

Bistro - Handcrafted Font

Bistro is a creative font with a handcrafted design. This font is perfect for designing slides related to creative work, kids, school presentations, and more. It comes with 3 different weights and in both serif and sans-serif versions.

Hunky Dory – Fun Bold Font

Hunky Dory - Fun Bold Font

This cute and adorable font features a fun and quirky design that makes it most suitable for designing presentations related to fun events. It will especially help get the attention of children.

Mosk – Free Clean Sans-Serif Font

Mosk - Free Clean Font

Mosk is a modern sans-serif font family that comes with 9 different font weights. You can use this free font to design both titles and paragraphs of your PowerPoint presentations.

Manrope – Free Geometric Sans-Serif Font

Manrope - Free Geometric Sans-Serif Font

Manrope is a unique sans-serif font that comes with 7 different weights. It features a geometrically accurate design that makes it perfect for all kinds of business and professional presentations.

Venice Serif – Font Family

Venice Serif - Font Family

Venice is a serif font with an elegantly thin design. The font comes in multiple weights, including light, bold, and italic versions. It also includes 195 glyphs and it’s best for fashion and luxury presentation designs.

Granite – Modern Brush Font

Granite - Modern Brush Font

Granite is a creative brush style font you can use to design bold and creative PowerPoint slides. The font includes lots of swashes and glyphs. It’s perfect for slides with colorful images and graphics.

Bison – Bold Font Family

Bison Font Family

Bison is a bold font family that comes with several unique font styles, including regular and outline versions of the font. It also features italics, numbers, and punctuations as well.

Frosty – Modern Typeface

Frosty - Modern Typeface

Frosty is a creative font you can use to design the titles of fun and attractive slides. The font features a quirky design that will work well with colorful and minimalist PowerPoint presentations.

Hobart – Minimal Typeface

Hobart Minimal Typeface

This sans-serif font is ideal for designing creative and business slideshow presentations. The font features a design inspired by a font released in the 20th Century and it comes in 3 different weights.

4 Tips for Choosing a Presentation Font

If you’re new to creating presentations, follow these tips to find the best font for your design.

1. Choose Fonts That Improve Readability

Most PowerPoint presentations include two different types of text titles or headings and paragraph text. When designing both types of text, you need to take readability into account.

Where are you presenting your slideshow? Will it be at a big conference for a big crowd? Or a small team meeting at the office? Depending on the situation, choose a font and a font size appropriately. For example, if you’re presenting the slideshow to a crowd at a large hall, you may want to use an easy to read sans-serif font with larger font size for paragraph text to let people in every corner read the text more easily.

2. Use No More Than Two Fonts

It’s best to use two different fonts for your titles and paragraph text. But, avoid using more than two fonts. Some people actually use one font for titles, one for bullet points, one for paragraphs, and another for sub-headings. This is a mistake that only creates confusion and destroys professionalism.

Use two matching font pairs for titles and paragraphs, preferably sans-serif fonts.

3. Keep Consistency

One of the biggest mistakes people make when using fonts in presentations is choosing different font styles that ruin readability. For example, using a script font for paragraphs is a terrible choice.

When choosing different fonts, also remember to keep consistency. Don’t use different fonts for each and every slide in your presentation.

4. Avoid Using All-Caps Fonts

Some fonts only include uppercase letters and doesn’t come with lowercase letters. When choosing a font, remember to check whether your font includes both sets of letters.

While all-caps text is suitable for designing titles and headings, it’s not a good choice for body text. You should try to avoid using all-caps fonts altogether especially when designing professional and business presentations.

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The 10 Best PowerPoint Fonts for Your Presentation Design

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Are you looking for the best PowerPoint fonts for your presentation? Fonts play a vital role in the readability and overall success of your presentation, and PowerPoint has several options to choose from. The fonts fall into four main categories that include: Serif, Sans Serif, Script and Decorative.

Whether you’re presenting a pitch deck to a group of investors, showing off your Q4 marketing plan, or creating sales enablement presentations for your team, fonts help to convey your message.

Below is a brief overview of the best PowerPoint fonts, including insights to help you determine the ideal font for your presentation.

As mentioned, there are four types of fonts to consider when looking at choosing the best font for your presentation. For simplicity, we’ve combined script and decorative together.

  • Serif fonts are classic, known for their extra tail (or "feet") at the end of each letter. Popular Serifs are Times New Roman, Century, Bookman, Lucida, Garamond and more.
  • Sans Serif fonts are those without the tail. The word "Sans" is French for without, and Serif refers to the extra tails. They include Arial, Calibri, Helvetica, Verdana, Lucida Sans, Tahoma and Century Gothic, etc.
  • Script and decorative fonts seek to emulate handwriting and are mostly reserved for special presentations. Here are the top ten PowerPoint fonts you can use for your presentations.

What is the best font for PowerPoint? Let's take a look at some of the most popular ones!

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Verdana is one of the easy choices for PowerPoint presentation fonts. It is a more recent font crafted in 1996 by Mathew Carter, for Microsoft, so you know it is optimized for the screen.

Its hallmarks include wide spaces and counters with tall lowercase letters that boost readability. Verdana is also one of the most compatible fonts available in almost all Windows and Mac computers.

presentation for font

Calibri is a popular Sans Serif font, second only to Arial, which it replaced in Microsoft Office 2007 to become the standard font used in the suit. Its use in PowerPoint presentations is favored for obvious reasons.

Calibri is simple and clear, with subtly rounded edges. It is the ideal choice when looking for a universal, readable Sans Serif PowerPoint font.

3. Palatino

presentation for font

Hermann Zapf designed Palatino back in 1949 based on type styles originating from the Italian Renaissance period. He was influenced by calligraphic works and created the Palatino font for advertising and print media headings.

Hermann also aimed to keep the font legible on low-quality paper and small-sized prints, including when viewed at a distance, making it ideal for PowerPoint presentation fonts. It is almost impossible to tell from Book Antiqua.

presentation for font

This font was designed for Microsoft and boasts the best clarity for presentations. Tahoma provides characters that are distinguishable from each other and looks more like Verdana, albeit tightly spaced for a more formal look.

Tahoma fonts came with Windows 95 and have since been used in PowerPoint presentations for their unique clarity and readability.

presentation for font

Georgia is highly regarded for its elegance and combines thick and thin strokes to provide well-spaced Serif characters. The font also features tall lowercase letters and has a classic look perfect for any presentation.

Georgia is the most similar font to Times New Roman, albeit bigger, making it ideal for presentations.

6. Gill Sans

presentation for font

Gill Sans is another classic presentation font that suits headers paired with Times New Roman body text. However, you can pair it with various other fonts.

It provides a warm and friendly appeal similar to that you find in Helvetica, another incredible choice for presentation fonts. There are multiple options, but Gill Sans MT remains the most uncomplicated and appealing in the family.

presentation for font

This font was designed with one goal in mind and that's to provide clean text without clutter on the screen. It was actually designed specifically for LCD monitors, so you know it’s optimized for presentations. Corbel is considered a "soft" font with curvy letterforms and old-style, lowercase numbers. The font is clean and clear, making it a natural choice for presentations that call for massive contrast. Its spacing also allows for readability at a distance.

It was released in 2005 to work with Microsoft's clear-type rendering, making it ideal for PowerPoint presentations. Corbel is quite similar to Candara, albeit more assertive with box dots (instead of circles) above lower cases for I and J.

presentation for font

The Segoe family of fonts is one of the best for presentations. It has been Microsoft's choice font for their logo and all other marketing materials, since the days of Windows Vista.

Segoe is quite similar to Verdana and maintains a warm, inviting look that's still airy and perfect on screens. The fonts feature wider spaces and heavier letters, making them ideal for headers.

9. Garamond

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This is one of the oldest fonts around, created back in the 1500s by Claude Garamond. Rather than a font, this is a style of fonts that includes different options, such as Adobe Garamond, Garamond ITC and Monotype Garamond.

The Roman Style fonts feature horizontal bars for letter "e" and ascended verticals crafted so for legibility in print. They are perfect for body text and provide quick contrast between title and text.

10. Century Gothic

presentation for font

Lastly, we can’t end this list without mentioning Century Gothic. It’s a sans-serif typeface with a geometric style. It was released in 1991 by Monotype Imaging, designed to compete with the ever-famous Futura. It’s style is very similar to the competitor, but with a larger x-height.

Century Gothic is based on Monotype 20th Century, which was drawn by Sol Hess between 1936 and 1947. It’s noted as being useful in advertising, such as headlines, display work and small quantities of text. Open Sans and Montserrat are also good alternatives here, but are not available to Microsoft users.

7 Tips for Choosing PowerPoint Fonts

Here are seven tips to help you find the best PowerPoint fonts for your presentation:

1. Stick to Standard Fonts

There are several fonts that you can use for your presentation that can be downloaded for free or generated using a free font generator . However, you are better off choosing standard fonts, such as Calibri, Tahoma, Gill Sans and Garamond, or even Times New Roman and Constantia. People are already fond of these fonts and see them often, which is great for readability.

2. Consider Contrast

When it comes to both font types and colors, aim for high contrast!

For example, black and white font colors are the easiest to read, so you should choose black fonts for white backgrounds and vice versa. Same goes for a light font on a dark background, dark on light backgrounds.

Some font types are thin and lightweight, while others are dark and thick, so the decision depends on your presentation. Nonetheless, make sure you have plenty of contrast to ensure your audience can clearly read the copy—even if you're just sharing your PowerPoint online . (It's also important to note that dont size for presenation is key—make sure your that your audience can read the words on screen).

3. Consider font pairing

Font pairing is instrumental as it creates instant hierarchy. However, you need to find the right pair, or your presentation will look amateur.

The standard approach is to pair Serif with Sans Serif fonts, which are the two main categories advisable when creating a presentation . Though you are definitely not limited to those styles. The rule of thumb is to use one font group for headers and the other for bullet text.

4. Stay away from all-caps fonts

All caps presentation fonts are hard to read, especially when you have a block of text. Also… do you want your audience to think you’re yelling at them?! PROBABLY NOT.

Capitalizing everything is more suited to alarms and single-word warnings. When it comes to presentation, you need fonts that allow you to mix cases at will, so you should avoid all fonts available in caps only.

5. Choose the right size

It is always essential to make the font big enough so that everyone can see and read. When determining size, think about the presentation screen and how the fonts look on larger/smaller displays. Some fonts are large, while others can be significantly smaller. It is also crucial to determine how other aspects, such as line and character spacing, affect the font.

6. Avoid Scripts, Italics and Decorative Fonts

Typefaces taken from novelty, scripts and handwritings are some of the coolest. However, they present a readability issue that transcends all the merits for featuring such fonts in your presentation. They also distract the audience and are more suited to online content and media. Presentations require enhancements that make the text easier to read.

7. Create Consistency

Like other forms of art, presentations are best when simple, so there's no need to download a complete library of fonts. A couple of options used consistently throughout your presentation will suffice. Make sure the font sizes, headers, bullets and text are consistent from start to finish, especially if you are creating professional presentations.

There are no hard rules when it comes to picking fonts for presentations—even if you're working off of a PowerPoint template . If anything, your project will determine the ideal fonts you should use. The layout, background, images and other aspects will all influence your font options.

Nonetheless, if you stick to standard fonts and keep things relatively simple and consistent, you should have one of the best presentations, in terms of readability. In addition to the ten fonts above, Lato, Roboto, Rockwell, Frutiger and Helvetica are all perfect for PowerPoint presentation.

If you're looking for tips on how to instal fonts into PowerPoint, follow this guide .

Rather have someone else design your PowerPoint for you? We've got you covered with our custom presentation design service .

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Microsoft 365 Life Hacks > Presentations > Choosing the Right Font For Your PowerPoint Presentation

Choosing the Right Font For Your PowerPoint Presentation

Whether it’s for a professional conference or middle school book report, it’s important to know the best font to use for your PowerPoint presentation . Believe it or not, fonts are a big part of the overall design of your presentation —and they can make a world of difference! Some convey a lighthearted message, while others can show authority, and so on.

Two people sitting at a coffee table collaborating on a PowerPoint presentation.

In this guide, we’ll take a closer look at:

  • The different styles of fonts
  • The 5 most popular fonts
  • How to embed fonts, and more.

What are the different styles of fonts? Before we get too deep into each font and what looks best, let’s examine font styles and how they’re classified.

  • Sans-serif fonts. Most serif fonts are easy to identify because of the tiny flags or projections on the ends of the characters. Serifs make distinguishing a lowercase L from a capital I in print easy.
  • Serif fonts. Sans-serif fonts are commonly used in digital media because serifs can make letters difficult to see if an image or screen is low-resolution.
  • Script fonts. Script fonts are also known as handwritten fonts because of the looping letters that make them look like cursive or calligraphy. Most people find it difficult to read more than a few sentences in a script font, so they’re best limited to a few words or a single phrase.
  • Monospaced fonts. Even when writing by hand, you’ll notice that not all letters take up the same amount of space. Monospaced fonts buck this trend by allotting the same amount of space laterally for all letters, similar to a typewriter.
  • Display fonts. Display fonts can also be known as fantasy or decorative fonts. These aren’t typically used for anything besides signage, banners, logos, or other text that’s isolated. Using display fonts for multiple sentences or a full paragraph isn’t a good practice because they can be hard to read or off-putting after a while.

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What are the 5 most popular fonts in presentations and why? A common theme you’ll notice when looking at the best fonts for PowerPoint is that they’re traditionally sans-serif fonts. Why? Well, this style is much easier to read from a distance and won’t feel cramped if letters are bolded. Additionally, the minimalistic style of sans-serif fonts isn’t distracting from the material or the speaker. Let’s look at five fonts that fit the best practices for a winning presentation .

Note: You’ll notice a serif font on this list, but we’ll address it when we get there.

  • Roboto. Roboto is a sans-serif font that’s relatively basic, with sharp edges and rounded loops, counters, and bowls (the rounded parts of letters) without going overly bold or too thin. You can be safe using Roboto for just about any presentation.
  • Verdana. Despite the font size you choose, not all fonts display the same. Verdana is a larger sans-serif font that can make it easier to display information without taking your font up an extra size.
  • Helvetica. A point of differentiation between Helvetica and other sans-serif fonts is the weight toward the top of the letters. The top of every lowercase letter and the midpoint of every capital letter go to a thick midline’s upper edge. For instance, the top of every lowercase letter reaches the same horizontal point as the top of the crossbar on an H. This unique feature makes the Helvetica type look larger and bolder than it really is, which makes it great for headings and titles.
  • Tahoma. Tahoma is different from the previous sans-serif fonts in that it is thinner than the others. While Tahoma might not have the same impact for a heading or title as Helvetica, it’s perfect for body text and fitting into smaller spaces without crowding.
  • Palatino Linotype. Serif fonts have long been considered a no-no with digital publications, but with the advent of high-resolution computer monitors, tablets, smartphones, and TVs, they’re fine. What’s more, the serifs on Palatino Linotype aren’t incredibly prominent, so they make for a subtle nod to old-style fonts without over-embellishing.

A person using a touch screen tablet to select the font and layout for their presentation.

How do you embed fonts in PowerPoint ? If you’re sharing your presentation with a friend, classmate, or colleague, you could be at risk of the fonts you used transferring properly to their device. For example, if you have a font you love using and installed it onto your computer, they might not have the same font. So, if you send your presentation to them, there could be formatting errors as their device defaults to a different font. Keep this from happening by embedding your font in PowerPoint using these easy steps:

  • Click the “File” tab.
  • Move down to the lower-lefthand corner of the window and click “Options.”
  • Click “Save” on the left side of the screen.
  • Scroll down to the section titled “Preserve fidelity when sharing this presentation:”
  • Click the box next to “Embed fonts in the file.”
  • If you or someone else will be using the presentation on a different device, then select the first option, “Embed only the characters used in the presentation (best for reducing file size).” If you or someone else will be editing the presentation on a different device, then select the second option, “Embed all characters (best for editing by other people).”
  • Click “OK.”

There you have it! Choosing the best font for PowerPoint doesn’t have to be difficult. The most important part is making sure that the font is easy to read, and sans-serif fonts are usually a good way to go. By the way, it’s always a good idea to get a second set of eyes on your presentation before your big speech—and be sure to practice it a few times to iron out the kinks !

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