Font Selection

Best Google Fonts for Body Text in 2026

업데이트됨 2월 24, 2026
The definitive ranking of Google Fonts optimized for long-form reading — tested for x-height, character width, hinting quality, and reading comfort.

Best Google Fonts for Body Text in 2026

Choosing a body font is not glamorous work. Body fonts are designed to disappear — to carry thousands of words without calling attention to themselves, to maintain comfortable reading rhythm across paragraphs, and to stay legible across a bewildering range of screen sizes, resolutions, and operating system rendering environments.

But the invisibility of a good body font is precisely what makes it so important. A bad heading font is annoying. A bad body font is exhausting. Readers experience your body text for minutes at a time; they see your headings for seconds. Get the body font wrong and you've compromised the core function of your content.

This guide covers what makes a font work for body text, how we evaluated the candidates, and the definitive ranked list for 2026.

What Makes a Font Good for Body Text?

Not every attractive font is suitable for body text. Many beautiful typefaces are designed for headlines and fail completely at paragraph sizes. Understanding the specific demands of body text helps you evaluate candidates objectively.

X-height. A font with a tall x-height — where lowercase letters occupy more of the cap height — appears larger and more legible at small sizes. A 17px font with a tall x-height reads more comfortably than a 17px font with a small x-height. This is one reason why many screen-optimized typefaces have been deliberately designed with larger x-heights than their print counterparts.

Stroke contrast. Body text fonts need moderate stroke contrast — the variation between thick and thin strokes in each letterform. Very high contrast (Didone/Modern serifs like Bodoni) makes thin strokes disappear at small sizes, creating visual noise. Very low contrast (some slab serifs, monolinear grotesques) can feel monotonous at extended reading sizes. The sweet spot is moderate contrast, where the variation adds rhythm without creating legibility problems.

Aperture. The "aperture" is the openness of partially enclosed letterforms — the open ends of 'c', 'e', 'a', 's'. Open apertures prevent letters from closing up and becoming ambiguous at small sizes or on low-resolution screens. A closed 'e' looks like an 'o' when pixels are scarce. Good body fonts have open apertures at text sizes.

Letter-spacing and tracking. Body fonts need appropriate default spacing — tight enough to feel cohesive, loose enough to allow each letter to breathe at small sizes. Fonts that require significant tracking adjustments to read comfortably are usually not optimized for body text.

Character set completeness. Body text fonts need a complete Latin character set including all common diacritics (accented characters for French, German, Spanish, Polish, etc.), proper quotation marks, en/em dashes, ellipses, and correct numerals. Missing characters force fallback to system fonts, creating inconsistent character appearance mid-sentence.

Rendering quality. Google Fonts with extensive hinting — instructions embedded in the font that guide pixel-level rendering — perform better on Windows and on lower-resolution displays. Some fonts that look excellent on Retina Mac displays become blurry or inconsistent on standard-DPI Windows screens. Screen rendering quality matters enormously for body text where readers spend the most time.

Testing Methodology: How We Ranked

Our ranking considered the following criteria, weighted for typical web content use cases:

  • Readability at 15–18px (most important)
  • Line rhythm in long-form paragraphs (45–75 character line length)
  • Cross-platform rendering (tested on macOS Retina, Windows 1080p, Android Chrome)
  • Character set completeness
  • Load performance (font file size, subset options)
  • Pairing flexibility (how many heading fonts it works with)
  • Historical usage at scale (fonts used on high-traffic sites have implicit performance validation)

We tested each font with identical content: a 500-word English paragraph with standard punctuation, numerals, and common special characters, set at 17px with 1.7 line-height, in a 640px column.

Top 10 Sans-Serif Fonts for Body Text

1. Inter

Inter is the benchmark for screen-optimized sans-serif body text in 2026. Designed by Rasmus Andersson specifically for computer screens, Inter uses optical adjustments — letter spacing that's tighter at large sizes, looser at small sizes — that make it read well across an enormous size range.

Inter's x-height is very tall, making lowercase letters highly legible. Its apertures are open. Its numerals are clear and well-differentiated (crucial for any content with data). The font family includes 18 weight/style combinations and a variable font version that allows smooth weight interpolation.

Use case: SaaS products, technical documentation, developer tools, data-heavy applications, any context where maximum screen readability is the priority.

body {
  font-family: 'Inter', sans-serif;
  font-size: 16px;
  line-height: 1.65;
  font-feature-settings: 'cv02', 'cv03', 'cv04', 'cv11'; /* Optional: alternate glyphs */
}

2. Source Sans 3

Adobe's Source Sans 3 (the third major revision of Source Sans Pro) is engineered for text. Paul Hunt designed it with newspaper and UI typography in mind — the character shapes are humanist and warm, but the construction is rigorous. Source Sans 3 performs well at body text sizes across all platforms, has a complete character set including Cyrillic and Greek, and pairs with an enormous number of serif heading fonts.

The "3" version improves optical sizing performance and spacing over Source Sans Pro, making it the preferred version for new projects.

3. Roboto

Roboto is statistically the most-used web font in the world — a result of its default status in Android and Material Design. That ubiquity reflects genuine quality: Roboto was designed for readability at small sizes on various DPI screens, and it delivers.

The 2022 redesign (Roboto v3, now "Roboto" on Google Fonts) improved spacing and hinting, making it an even stronger choice for body text. It's a grotesque sans with some humanist influences — slightly warmer than Helvetica, more neutral than Lato.

Potential issue: Roboto is so common that projects seeking distinctive personality may want a less ubiquitous alternative. For pure readability and reliability, it remains a top choice.

4. Lato

Lato was designed by Łukasz Dziedzic with "summer" characteristics — certain warmth encoded in the letterforms that makes extended reading comfortable. In practice, Lato's humanist semi-geometric design reads very comfortably in body text and pairs with a wide range of heading fonts.

Lato is particularly well-suited to longer-form content (blogs, articles, documentation) where the humanist warmth prevents reading fatigue over many paragraphs. It's slightly warmer than Roboto and more neutral than Nunito — a middle-ground choice that suits many contexts.

5. Nunito Sans

The "Sans" version of Nunito removes the distinctive rounded terminals of the original Nunito while preserving the humanist proportions. The result is a highly readable body font with a friendly, approachable character that suits consumer-facing apps, educational content, and wellness brands.

Nunito Sans is particularly good for interfaces that need a warm, non-clinical feel. Compare it with Inter (more precise and technical) and Roboto (more neutral) — Nunito Sans sits noticeably warmer than both.

6. Open Sans

Open Sans has been a Google Fonts staple since 2011. Designed by Steve Matteson for legibility across print, web, and mobile, it features a neutral expression that adapts to many contexts. Open Sans has wider metrics than Roboto — individual letters take slightly more horizontal space — which some readers find more comfortable for extended reading.

Open Sans is less fashionable than it was five years ago, but "unfashionable" is not the same as "wrong." It remains an excellent, reliable choice for body text, particularly in contexts where its historical associations with professional web content are appropriate.

7. Work Sans

Work Sans is specifically optimized for screen usage, with simplified letterforms that render cleanly at small sizes. Designer Wei Huang describes it as suited for "screen use, like computer and mobile displays." In practice, Work Sans has a slightly quirky character — not as neutral as Roboto, not as warm as Lato — that suits contemporary brand personalities.

At 14–16px body text size, Work Sans is particularly clean. It's a good choice for interfaces with dense information where clear letterform differentiation prevents reading errors.

8. Hind

Hind is designed to support Devanagari script while providing an excellent Latin companion, which means its Latin letterforms have been designed with careful attention to proportions and rendering quality. The result is a clean, modern sans-serif with excellent readability at body text sizes.

Hind is underused in Western web design relative to its quality. Its clean execution and multiple weight options (Light through Bold) make it a strong choice for international sites or any project where multilingual character set support is important.

9. IBM Plex Sans

IBM Plex Sans is part of IBM's comprehensive corporate type system. Designed by Bold Monday for IBM, it combines humanist and grotesque characteristics in a way that communicates both technical authority and human legibility. It's particularly well-suited for SaaS products and B2B software where the IBM design language (rationalist, trustworthy, precise) resonates.

IBM Plex Sans has the added advantage of being a designed companion to IBM Plex Serif and IBM Plex Mono — forming a coherent three-family system for technical content.

10. DM Sans

DM Sans, part of the "DM" family from Colophon Foundry, is a geometric humanist sans designed explicitly for digital interfaces. It's characterized by minimal stroke modulation, large x-height, and clean apertures. DM Sans performs exceptionally well at body text sizes and is particularly suited to product marketing pages and contemporary brand sites.

As part of the DM superfamily, DM Sans pairs naturally with DM Serif Display for heading text — a designed combination that removes all font pairing guesswork.

Top 5 Serif Fonts for Body Text

1. Merriweather

Merriweather was designed specifically for screen readability by Eben Sorkin. Its large x-height (intentionally larger than traditional serif proportions), low contrast, and sturdy strokes make it one of the most reliable serif body fonts available. It performs well across screen resolutions, DPI settings, and operating systems.

Merriweather is the serif equivalent of Roboto: slightly unfashionable, completely reliable, used at massive scale on high-traffic sites. When in doubt about which serif to use for body text, Merriweather is the safe choice.

body {
  font-family: 'Merriweather', serif;
  font-size: 17px;
  line-height: 1.8; /* Merriweather needs slightly more line-height */
  font-weight: 300; /* Light works beautifully for extended reading */
}

2. Lora

Lora is a contemporary literary serif designed for screen use. Its calligraphic roots give it warmth and rhythm in body text while its careful optimization for screen rendering keeps it legible at 14–18px. Lora's moderate stroke contrast sits well below display serifs but adds enough variation to provide reading rhythm.

Lora is particularly well-suited to blogs, literary content, and editorial sites where the humanist warmth of the design enhances the reading experience.

3. EB Garamond

EB Garamond is a revival of Claude Garamond's 16th-century serif, optimized for contemporary screens. At body text sizes (16–20px on high-resolution screens), EB Garamond provides an unmatched reading experience for literary and scholarly content. The Renaissance humanist proportions — long ascenders and descenders, moderate x-height, elegant stroke variation — create a dignified rhythm in long-form prose.

Important caveat: EB Garamond is best for high-resolution screens. On Windows with standard DPI, its thin strokes can render less crisply. Test carefully on your target audience's devices.

4. PT Serif

PT Serif was developed by Paratype for multilingual use, with comprehensive character set support for Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek scripts. It's designed for web readability with sturdy strokes and generous spacing. PT Serif is particularly valuable for international content or European languages where proper diacritic support is essential.

The design has a slightly Soviet-era aesthetic (it was developed for Russian cultural and educational publishing), which gives it a distinctive gravitas appropriate for serious content.

5. Libre Baskerville

Libre Baskerville is a web-optimized revival of the classic Baskerville typeface. The original Baskerville (18th century) is considered the most readable serif design — rational, warm, with moderate stroke contrast. Libre Baskerville updates it for screen use with adjusted proportions and improved hinting.

For professional, authoritative body text — legal, financial, journalistic — Libre Baskerville carries appropriate institutional weight while maintaining comfortable readability.

Honorable Mentions

Crimson Text / Crimson Pro — A beautiful literary serif that approaches the warmth of Garamond with somewhat better screen rendering. Excellent for editorial content. Crimson Pro is the improved version with better spacing.

Nunito — The rounded variant (with terminals) makes a distinctively warm body font for consumer apps, though the roundness can feel slightly informal for professional contexts.

Noto Sans — Google's "No Tofu" font family, designed to support every Unicode character. Unmatched in character set coverage. Essential for multilingual applications. The design is functional rather than distinctive.

Karla — A grotesque sans with unusual character (the proportions and spacing have a slightly eccentric quality) that works well for brands seeking a subtly different personality from Roboto/Lato.

Mulish — Optimized for body text with clean, geometric forms. Similar to Open Sans but with a slightly more contemporary character. Worth considering for consumer products.

Body Font Recommended Heading Pairing Best Use Case
Inter Playfair Display SaaS, dashboards, editorial
Source Sans 3 Source Serif 4 Corporate, documentation
Roboto Oswald News, information, dashboards
Lato Montserrat Business, marketing
Nunito Sans Nunito Consumer apps, education
Open Sans Raleway Professional services
Merriweather Lato Blogs, long-form content
Lora Montserrat Lifestyle, editorial blogs
EB Garamond Inter Literary, scholarly content
Libre Baskerville Libre Franklin Journalism, institutions

Test all of these combinations with your real content using the font pairing tool. Body font performance varies meaningfully with content type, line length, and target device — what ranks highly in this list may not be optimal for your specific use case. The right body font is the one that disappears into comfortable reading for your readers, on their devices, with your content.

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언급된 폰트

Roboto Sans Serif #1

Christian Robertson이 Google의 Material Design 생태계를 위해 설계한 이 네오 그로테스크 산세리프체는 웹과 Android에서 가장 널리 사용되는 서체입니다. 이중적인 설계 방식이 기계적 정밀함과 자연스러운 읽기 리듬을 균형 있게 결합하여, UI 레이블과 장문 텍스트 모두에 잘 어울립니다. 가변 폰트는 너비 및 굵기 축을 지원하며, 키릴 문자, 그리스 문자, 확장 라틴 스크립트를 함께 포함하고 있습니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Open Sans Sans Serif #2

Steve Matteson이 제작한 이 휴머니스트 산세리프체는 직립 강세와 열린 어퍼처를 통해 다양한 화면 크기와 해상도에서 뛰어난 가독성을 발휘합니다. 역대 가장 많이 배포된 웹 폰트 중 하나로, 본문, 이메일 템플릿, 웹 애플리케이션에 적합한 중립적이고 전문적인 분위기를 자아냅니다. 가변 너비·굵기 축과 히브리어·그리스 문자 지원을 갖춰 다국어 환경에서도 유연하게 활용됩니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Inter Sans Serif #5

Rasmus Andersson이 수년에 걸쳐 컴퓨터 화면을 위해 정제한 이 네오 그로테스크체는 디지털 디스플레이의 소형 크기에서 높은 가독성을 위해 자간, x-높이, 획 대비를 최적화했습니다. 광학 크기 축(opsz)을 통해 캡션과 헤드라인에 따라 디자인이 자동으로 조정되며, 굵기 축은 얇은 것부터 블랙까지 전체 범위를 커버합니다. 전 세계 대시보드, 문서화 사이트, 개발자 도구의 사실상 표준 선택으로 자리잡았습니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Poppins Sans Serif #7

Indian Type Foundry가 개발한 이 기하학적 산세리프체는 완벽하게 원형인 볼과 균일한 획 너비를 데바나가리 지원과 결합하여, 디자인 수준에서 라틴 문자와 인도 문자를 진정으로 통합한 몇 안 되는 서체 중 하나입니다. 정밀하고 현대적인 자형은 자신감과 친근함을 동시에 전달하여, 스타트업 랜딩 페이지와 앱 인터페이스에서 특히 인기를 얻고 있습니다. 가변 폰트 없이도 9가지 굵기의 18가지 스타일로 실용적인 유연성을 제공합니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Noto Sans Sans Serif #13

Google의 Noto 범유니코드 프로젝트에서 라틴 문자를 주축으로 하는 이 휴머니스트 sans-serif는 데바나가리, 키릴 문자, 그리스어, 베트남어와 표준 라틴 문자에 걸쳐 스크립트 간 최대의 조화를 위해 설계되었습니다. 가변 너비 및 굵기 축을 통해 컴팩트한 UI 레이블부터 편안한 본문 텍스트까지 세밀한 조정이 가능합니다. 다양한 문자 체계에서 문서를 올바르게 렌더링해야 할 때 가장 안전한 선택입니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Nunito Sans Serif #15

Vernon Adams는 끝부분에 부드러운 곡선을 가진 터미널을 중심으로 이 라운드 sans-serif를 설계했으며, 유치하거나 지나치게 캐주얼하지 않으면서도 친근하고 편안한 따뜻함을 줍니다. 균형 잡힌 비례와 열린 개구부는 본문 텍스트 크기에서도 강한 가독성을 유지하며, 둥근 획 끝부분은 부드러움을 전달합니다. 교육 앱, 헬스케어 인터페이스, 소비자 제품에서 인기가 높습니다. 가변 굵기 축은 ExtraLight부터 Black까지, 키릴 문자와 베트남어를 지원합니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Merriweather Serif #23

Sorkin Type이 화면 읽기의 편안함을 위해 설계한 Merriweather는 넉넉한 x-높이, 약간 압축된 자형, 저해상도 디스플레이의 작은 크기에서도 잘 버티는 견고한 세리프가 특징입니다. 가변 폰트 구현은 광학 크기, 너비, 굵기 축을 동시에 제공하는 드문 수준으로, 캡션부터 헤드라인까지 정밀한 타이포그래피 조절이 가능합니다. 작가와 출판사들은 장문의 에디토리얼 콘텐츠와 블로그 타이포그래피에서 Merriweather를 즐겨 선택합니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Lora Serif #26

Lora는 서예 전통에 뿌리를 둔 균형 잡힌 현대적 세리프 서체로, 적당한 대비와 유려한 곡선이 문학적 특성을 물씬 풍깁니다. Cyreal은 화면에서의 읽기 편안함을 위해 특별히 설계했으며, 가변 굵기 축과 함께 키릴 문자, 베트남어, 수학 기호, 심볼 지원이 영어 산문을 훨씬 넘어서는 활용성을 보장합니다. 세련된 블로그 레이아웃과 따뜻함과 신뢰성이 중요한 학술 조판 모두에서 뛰어난 성능을 발휘합니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
Source Sans 3 Sans Serif #43

Source Sans는 Adobe 최초의 오픈소스 서체로, Paul D. Hunt가 사용자 인터페이스를 위한 깔끔하고 읽기 좋은 sans-serif로 설계했습니다. Source Sans 3는 완전한 가변 폰트로서 굵기 축 전반을 아우르는 가장 세련된 버전입니다. Robert Slimbach의 캘리그래피 레터링 비례에서 도출된 인문주의적 구조는 자칫 단조로울 수 있는 중립적 그로테스크에 온기를 더합니다. 키릴, 그리스어, 베트남어를 포함한 광범위한 스크립트 지원 덕분에 다국어 문서 및 크로스플랫폼 UI 디자인에 믿음직한 선택입니다.

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

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