PDF download Download Article
Quickly find out what font a website used with WhatFont
PDF download Download Article

Have you ever liked a font on a website and wanted to find it later? This wikiHow article teaches you how to use WhatFont to identify the fonts a website is using.

Things You Should Know

  • Easily figure out what font a website uses in WhatFont by clicking the extension icon and hovering over the font you want to identify.
  • WhatFont hasn't been updated since 2017, so there are some websites that it doesn't work on.
  • If WhatFont isn't working for you, try alternatives like Fontanello or your browser's inspect tool .
  1. Go to the website that has the font you want to identify.
  2. If you haven't pinned the extension to your extensions space, click the puzzle icon and then click the WhatFont icon. It looks like "f?".
    Advertisement
  3. The font will be listed next to your cursor and will change as the font changes.
    • You can click that font for more details, like the size, font family, and style.
    • WhatFont does not work on every site! If you instead get a drop-down menu when you click the extension icon, you can go to the WhatFont site, but the extension isn't working for that page. You can wait a minute for the information to load and then try again, but some sites just won't work with it.
    • If WhatFont isn't working for you, try Fontanello, which works for Chrome , and Firefox . To use Fontanello, highlight the text, right-click it, then select Fontanello to see information about that font.
  4. Advertisement

Community Q&A

Search
Add New Question
  • Question
    Why does Chrome eat more data?
    Community Answer
    Chrome has many more features than more simple browsers. It also partially loads the top search results to make loading of the page you clicked on quicker.
Ask a Question
      Advertisement

      Tips

      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!

      Warnings

      • WhatFont hasn't been updated since 2017, so alternatives might be preferable to use for identifying fonts.
      Advertisement

      Video

      About This Article

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 74,012 times.

      Is this article up to date?

      Advertisement