Common Web Fonts for Windows & Mac

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Thu, Oct 16, 2008 - written by Taylor Trask

Design, Featured

Common Web Fonts for Windows & Mac

Here you can find the list with the standard set of fonts common to all versions of Windows and their Mac substitutes, referred sometimes as “browser safe fonts”.

If you are new to web design, maybe you are thinking: “Why do I have to limit to that small set of fonts?  I have a large collection of nice fonts in my computer.”  As seasoned web designers already know, browsers can use only the fonts installed in the same computer, so it means that every visitor of your web page needs to have all the fonts you want to use installed in his/her computer.  Different people will have different fonts installed, thus the need for a standard set of fonts.

The list
First, a few introductory notes:

  • The names in grey are the generic family of each font.
  • In some cases the Mac equivalent is the same font, since Mac OS X also includes some of the fonts shipped with Windows.
  • The notes at the bottom contains specific information about some of the fonts.

1 Georgia and Trebuchet MS are bundled with Windows 2000/XP and they are also included in the IE font pack (and bundled with other MS applications), so they are quite common in Windows 98 systems.

2 Symbolic fonts are only displayed in Internet Explorer, in other browsers a font substitute is used instead (although the Symbol font does work in Opera and the Webdings works in Safari).

3 Book Antiqua is almost exactly the same font that Palatino Linotype, Palatino Linotype is included in Windows 2000/XP while Book Antiqua was bundled with Windows 98.

4 These fonts are not TrueType fonts but bitmap fonts, so they won’t look well when using some font sizes (they are designed for 8, 10, 12, 14, 18 and 24 point sizes at 96 DPI).

5 These fonts work in Safari but only when using the normal font style, and not with bold or italic styles. Comic Sans MS works in bold but not in italic. Other Mac browsers seems to emulate properly the styles not provided by the font (thanks to Christian Fecteau for the tip).

6 These fonts are present in Mac OS X only if Classic is installed.

This post was written by:

Taylor Trask - who has written 104 posts on ProduceYou.


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2 Comments For This Post

  1. normalityrelief Says:

    This is actually incredibly helpful. Thanks for thinking to post!

  2. Matt D. Says:

    I’ve been looking everywhere for a good reference for this. Every other website tried to use the actual font, so of course I can’t see what it actually looks like.

    Thanks man!

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