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List of Common fonts for all versions of Windows and Mac equivalent
Topic Normal List of Common fonts for all versions of Windows and Mac equivalent
by Rishi on 03/10/2010 16:09

List of Common fonts for all versions of Windows and Mac equivalen

 

Introduction

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". This is the reference I use when making web pages and I expect you will find it useful too.

If you are new to web design, maybe you are thinking: "Why I have to limit to that small set of fonts? I have a large collection of nice fonts in my computer". Well, 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. Of course, different people will have different fonts installed, and thus come the need of a standard set of fonts. Fortunately, CSS allows set several values for the font-family property, which eases the task a bit.

If you want to know how the fonts are displayed in other OS's or browsers than yours, after the table you can find several screen shots of this page in different systems and browsers. Also, you can take a look to the list of the default fonts included with each version of Windows.

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.
 
Windows fonts / Mac fonts / Font family
Normal styleBold style
Arial, Arial, Helveticasans-serifArial, Arial, Helveticasans-serif
Arial Black, Arial Black, Gadgetsans-serifArial Black, Arial Black, Gadgetsans-serif
Comic Sans MS, Comic Sans MS5cursiveComic Sans MS, Comic Sans MS5cursive
Courier New, Courier New, Courier6monospaceCourier New, Courier New, Courier6monospace
Georgia1GeorgiaserifGeorgia1Georgiaserif
Impact, Impact5, Charcoal6sans-serifImpact, Impact5, Charcoal6sans-serif
Lucida Console, Monaco5monospaceLucida Console, Monaco5monospace
Lucida Sans Unicode, Lucida Grandesans-serifLucida Sans Unicode, Lucida Grandesans-serif
Palatino Linotype, Book Antiqua3Palatino6serifPalatino Linotype, Book Antiqua3Palatino6serif
Tahoma, Genevasans-serifTahoma, Genevasans-serif
Times New Roman, TimesserifTimes New Roman, Timesserif
Trebuchet MS1Helveticasans-serifTrebuchet MS1Helveticasans-serif
Verdana, Verdana, Genevasans-serifVerdana, Verdana, Genevasans-serif
Symbol, Symbol (Symbol2Symbol2)Symbol, Symbol (Symbol2Symbol2)
Webdings, Webdings (Webdings2Webdings2)Webdings, Webdings (Webdings2Webdings2)
Wingdings, Zapf Dingbats (Wingdings2Zapf Dingbats2)Wingdings, Zapf Dingbats (Wingdings2Zapf Dingbats2)
MS Sans Serif4Genevasans-serifMS Sans Serif4Genevasans-serif
MS Serif4New York6serifMS Serif4New York6serif

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).