Poppins

Designed by Indian Type Foundry, Jonny Pinhorn, Ninad Kale

9 weights • Version 24 • On Google Fonts since 2015 • Popularity #7

Quick Summary

18

Styles · incl. italic

100-900

Weight Range

Static

Not variable

3

Languages / Subsets

Category
sans-serif
Best for
textdisplay
Descriptors
geometricexpanded
Scripts
Devanagari, Latin
Origin
United Kingdom
License
SIL Open Font License
Last updated
Sep 16, 2025

© 2020 The Poppins Project Authors

The quick brown fox

32px

About Poppins Fonts

Geometric sans serif typefaces have always been popular, and with support for both the Devanagari and Latin writing systems, Poppins is an internationalist addition to the genre.

Many of the Latin glyphs (such as the ampersand) are more constructed and rationalist than is typical. The Devanagari design was particularly novel when it was first published in 2015, and was the first ever Devanagari typeface with a range of weights in this genre. Just like the Latin, the Devanagari is based on pure geometry, particularly circles.

Each letterform is nearly monolinear, with optical corrections applied to stroke joints where necessary to maintain an even typographic color. The Devanagari base character height and the Latin ascender height are equal; Latin capital letters are shorter than the Devanagari characters, and the Latin x-height is set rather high.

The project was developed by Indian Type Foundry (ITF). The Devanagari was initially designed by Ninad Kale, while the Latin was initially designed by Jonny Pinhorn. Following their principal phase of designing the first 5 styles, the typeface was later refined, and expanded to include multiple weights and italics, by the ITF studio team.

To contribute, see github.com/itfoundry/poppins

Who Designed Poppins?

Indian Type Foundry portrait

Indian Type Foundry

Indian Type Foundry (ITF) creates retail and custom multilingual fonts for print and digital media. Started in 2009 by Satya Rajpurohit and Peter Bil’ak, ITF works with designers from across the world. ITF fonts are used by clients ranging from tech giants like Apple, Google, and Sony, to various international brands.

Github | Twitter

Jonny Pinhorn

After completing an MA in Type Design at the University of Reading, Jonny went on to design Karla for Google Fonts. Karla is a popular and quirky sans-serif typeface that supports both Latin and Tamil scripts. His continued fascination with India and Indian languages led him to ITF, where he worked for three years. Jonny continues to work exclusively on Indic scripts—including Shrikhand and Atithi most recently.

Jonnypinhorn.co.uk | GitHub | Twitter

Google FontsSource Code

Similar sans-serif Fonts

sans-serif
18 WeightsVARIt

Roboto

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Christian Robertson, Paratype, Font Bureau

v50

sans-serif
12 WeightsVARIt

Open Sans

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Steve Matteson

v44

sans-serif
8 WeightsIt

Google Sans

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Google

v67

sans-serif
9 WeightsVAR

Noto Sans JP

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Google

v55

sans-serif
18 WeightsVARIt

Montserrat

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Julieta Ulanovsky, Sol Matas, Juan Pablo del Peral, Jacques Le Bailly

v31

sans-serif
18 WeightsVARIt

Inter

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog

Rasmus Andersson

v20

Need to Find Similar Fonts from an Image?

Use our What The Google Font Finder to identify and find similar Google Fonts from images, screenshots, logos, or design mockups.

Use Font Finder Tool