Typography in Windows Apps

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As the visual representation of language, typography's main task is to communicate information. Its style should never get in the way of that goal. In this article, we'll discuss how to style typography in your Windows app to help users understand content easily and efficiently.

Font

You should use one font throughout your app's UI, and we recommend sticking with the default font for Windows apps, Segoe UI Variable. It's designed to maintain optimal legibility across sizes and pixel densities and offers a clean, light, and open aesthetic that complements the content of the system.

Sample text of Segoe UI Variable font.

To display non-English languages or to select a different font for your app, please see Languages and Fonts for our recommended fonts for Windows apps.

First screenshot of a green bar that has a green check mark and the word Do in it. Pick one font for your UI.

don't Don't mix multiple fonts.

Variable font axes

The Segoe UI Variable font contains two axes for finer control of text. This font has a weight axis (wght) with weights from Thin (100) to Bold (700). It also has an optical size axis (opsz) for optical scaling from 8pt to 36pt. When using XAML common controls, the Segoe UI Variable font will be selected by default for supported languages. When this font or another variable font with an optical axis is used, the optical size will automatically match the requested font-size. When using HTML, optical scaling is also automatic, but you will need to specify the Segoe UI Variable font in CSS.

Size and scaling

Font sizes in UWP apps automatically scale on all devices. The scaling algorithm ensures that a 24 px font on Surface Hub 10 feet away is just as legible as a 24 px font on 5" phone that's a few inches away.

viewing distances for different devices.

Because of how the scaling system works, you're designing in effective pixels, not actual physical pixels, and you shouldn't have to alter font sizes for different screens sizes or resolutions.

Second screenshot of a green bar that has a green check mark and the word Do in it. Follow the Windows type ramp sizing.

don't Don't use a font size smaller than 12 px.

Hierarchy

Users rely on visual hierarchy when scanning a page: headers summarize content, and body text provides more detail. To create a clear visual hierarchy in your app, follow the Windows type ramp.

Screenshot of three lines of text where the font size gets smaller from one line to the next.

Type ramp

The Windows type ramp establishes crucial relationships between the type styles on a page, helping users read content easily. All sizes are in effective pixels and are optimized for UWP apps running on all devices.

The Windows type ramp.

Check out the guidance on using the XAML type ramp for more details.

Alignment

The default TextAlignment is Left, and in most instances, flush-left and ragged right provides consistent anchoring of the content and a uniform layout. For RTL languages, see Adjusting layout and fonts to support globalization.

Shows flush-left text.

<TextBlock TextAlignment="Left">

Character count

Fourth screenshot of a green bar that has a green check mark and the word Do in it. Keep to 50–60 letters per line for ease of reading.

don't Don't use fewer than 20 characters or more than 60 characters per line as this is difficult to read.

Clipping and ellipses

When the amount of text extends beyond the space available, we recommend clipping the text and inserting ellipses [...], which is the default behavior of most UWP text controls.

Shows a device frame with some text clipping.

<TextBlock TextWrapping="WrapWholeWords" TextTrimming="Clip"/>

Fifth screenshot of a green bar that has a green check mark and the word Do in it. Clip text, and wrap if multiple lines are enabled.

don't Don't use ellipses to avoid visual clutter.

Note

If containers are not well-defined (for example, no differentiating background color), or when there is a link to see more text, then use ellipses.

Languages

Segoe UI Variable is our font for English, European languages, Greek, and Russian. For other languages, see the following recommendations.

Globalizing/localizing fonts

Use the LanguageFont font-mapping APIs for programmatic access to the recommended font family, size, weight, and style for a particular language. The LanguageFont object provides access to the correct font info for various categories of content including UI headers, notifications, body text, and user-editable document body fonts. For more info, see Adjusting layout and fonts to support globalization.

Fonts for non-Latin languages

Font-family Styles Notes
Ebrima Regular, Bold User-interface font for African scripts (ADLaM, Ethiopic, N'Ko, Osmanya, Tifinagh, Vai).
Gadugi Regular, Bold User-interface font for North American scripts (Canadian Syllabics, Cherokee, Osage).
Leelawadee UI

Regular, Semilight, Bold User-interface font for Southeast Asian scripts (Buginese, Khmer, Lao, Thai).
Malgun Gothic

Regular User-interface font for Korean.
Microsoft JhengHei UI

Regular, Bold, Light User-interface font for Traditional Chinese.
Microsoft YaHei UI

Regular, Bold, Light User-interface font for Simplified Chinese.
Myanmar Text

Regular Fallback font for Myanmar script.
Nirmala UI

Regular, Semilight, Bold User-interface font for South Asian scripts (Bangla, Chakma, Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Meetei Mayek, Odia, Ol Chiki, Sinhala, Sora Sompeng, Tamil, Telugu).
Segoe UI

Regular, Italic, Light Italic, Black Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Light, Semilight, Semibold, Black User-interface font for Arabic, Armenian, Georgian, and Hebrew.
SimSun

Regular A legacy Chinese UI font.
Yu Gothic UI

Light, Semilight, Regular, Semibold, Bold User-interface font for Japanese.

Fonts

Sans-serif fonts

Sans-serif fonts are a great choice for headings and UI elements.

Font-family Styles Notes
Arial Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Black Supports European and Middle Eastern scripts (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic, Armenian, and Hebrew). Black weight supports European scripts only.
Calibri Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Light, Light Italic Supports European and Middle Eastern scripts (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic and Hebrew). Arabic available in the uprights only.
Consolas Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic Fixed width font that supports European scripts (Latin, Greek and Cyrillic).
Segoe UI Regular, Italic, Light Italic, Black Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Light, Semilight, Semibold, Black User-interface font for European and Middle East scripts (Arabic, Armenian, Cyrillic, Georgian, Greek, Hebrew, Latin), and also Lisu script.
Selawik Regular, Semilight, Light, Bold, Semibold An open-source font that's metrically compatible with Segoe UI, intended for apps on other platforms that don't want to bundle Segoe UI. Get Selawik on GitHub.

Serif fonts

Serif fonts are good for presenting large amounts of text.

Font-family Styles Notes
Cambria Regular Serif font that supports European scripts (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic).
Courier New Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic Serif fixed width font that supports European and Middle Eastern scripts (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic, Armenian, and Hebrew).
Georgia Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic Supports European scripts (Latin, Greek and Cyrillic).
Times New Roman Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic Legacy font that supports European scripts (Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic, Armenian, Hebrew).

Variable fonts

Variable fonts are good for precisely controlling the appearance of text.

Font-family Axes Notes
Bahnschrift Weight, Width Variable font that supports Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic.
Segoe UI Variable Weight, Optical Size Variable font that supports Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic.

Symbols and icons

Font-family Styles Notes
Segoe MDL2 Assets Regular User-interface font for app icons. For more info, see the Segoe MDL2 assets article.
Segoe UI Emoji Regular User-interface font for Emoji.
Segoe UI Symbol Regular Fallback font for symbols.