Free Alternatives to Favorit for Editorial

7 alternatives | 5 highly relevant | sans serif | Best match: Work Sans (75%)

Looking for a free sans serif font for editorial projects? Favorit by Dinamo is a popular choice, but its licensing cost can be prohibitive. We've curated 7 free alternatives that work well in editorial contexts. We've identified 5 that are especially well-suited for this context. Each alternative is scored by visual similarity and contextual relevance, and ships under an open-source license for both personal and commercial use.

Top Picks

Comparison Table

Font Relevance Similarity Weights Variable License Source
Work Sans 48 75% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Libre Franklin 47 65% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Inter 28 78% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Space Grotesk 28 76% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Familjen Grotesk 27 70% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
DM Sans 7 72% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Geist 7 68% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗

Most Relevant (5)

#1 Work Sans 75% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Similar editorial character with more conventional proportions and American gothic influence

Why it matches: Work Sans shares Favorit's editorial versatility and its willingness to carry personality at text sizes. Both typefaces feel intentional rather than default in editorial layouts, and both produce a slightly warm, characterful typographic texture in paragraphs. Work Sans draws from the American gothic tradition rather than Favorit's Swiss grotesque heritage, which gives it a different tonal register — more industrial, less art-world. The humanist touches in Work Sans's stroke terminals add a warmth that parallels the warmth Favorit achieves through its irregularities, albeit through different means.
editorial layouts and magazine designcontent-heavy cultural platformsresponsive marketing sitescross-platform design systems
Get Font ↗
#2 Libre Franklin 65% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

American grotesque heritage provides editorial credibility with more conventional character

Why it matches: Libre Franklin connects to Favorit through the shared tradition of grotesque typography refined for editorial use. Both typefaces work well in publishing contexts and carry enough character to feel chosen rather than defaulted to. Libre Franklin draws from the American industrial gothic tradition (Franklin Gothic) rather than Favorit's Swiss art-school heritage, giving it a more robust, journalistic character. The proportions are more condensed and the personality is more straightforward — Libre Franklin signals editorial seriousness where Favorit signals cultural awareness.
editorial and publishing projectsnews and journalism websitesbrand identity with editorial rootsprint-to-digital conversions
Get Font ↗
#3 Inter 78% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Clean grotesque that matches Favorit's structural proportions while losing the quirky details

Why it matches: Inter mirrors Favorit's fundamental grotesque skeleton — both share a tall x-height, open counters, and a preference for clarity at screen sizes. The structural proportions are close enough that Inter can serve as a functional stand-in for Favorit in UI and editorial contexts. Where the match breaks down is in personality: Favorit's idiosyncratic terminals, slightly irregular rhythm, and unexpected proportional quirks give it a hand-finished quality that Inter's engineered precision deliberately avoids. Inter is Favorit with the weirdness sanded off — entirely competent, but missing the point of why designers choose Favorit in the first place.
product UI requiring Favorit's proportionseditorial web layouts at body sizesdesign system foundationsprojects where quirk is less important than coverage
Get Font ↗
#4 Space Grotesk 76% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Shares quirky geometric details and a contemporary sensibility that echoes Favorit's unconventional spirit

Why it matches: Space Grotesk is the free font that comes closest to capturing Favorit's essential quality: a grotesque that refuses to behave entirely as expected. Both typefaces feature geometric foundations interrupted by unexpected details — unusual curves, slightly off-kilter proportions, and an overall rhythm that rewards close inspection. Space Grotesk's technical heritage (derived from the monospace Space Mono) gives it a similarly self-aware, design-literate character. The proportions are different — Space Grotesk is more compact — but the feeling of encountering a typeface designed by someone who knows the rules well enough to break them selectively is shared.
creative agency brandingart and culture websiteseditorial display typographydesign portfolio sites
Get Font ↗
#5 Familjen Grotesk 70% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Contemporary neo-grotesque with similar editorial sensibility and understated cultural positioning

Why it matches: Familjen Grotesk shares Favorit's position as a contemporary neo-grotesque designed for culturally aware audiences. Both typefaces feature clean proportions and restrained sophistication that appeals to editorial and institutional contexts. Familjen Grotesk carries a Scandinavian minimalism that echoes Favorit's Swiss restraint, and both produce a similarly refined reading experience at text sizes. The key difference is that Familjen Grotesk is more conventionally well-behaved — it lacks the irregular details and unexpected proportions that give Favorit its distinctive personality.
gallery and museum websitescultural institution brandingminimal editorial layoutsScandinavian-influenced design
Get Font ↗

Other Alternatives (2)

#6 DM Sans 72%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Clean modern sans that substitutes geometric precision for Favorit's handmade quality

Why it matches: DM Sans approximates Favorit's clean surface presentation — both read as modern, professional sans-serifs at a glance. The geometric-humanist hybrid construction of DM Sans produces a similar overall typographic color at body sizes, and its open apertures echo Favorit's readability at small sizes. The fundamental difference is temperament: DM Sans is engineered for broad appeal and reliable performance, while Favorit is crafted for character and distinctiveness. At display sizes where Favorit's quirky details become visible, DM Sans reads as competent but generic.
startup product interfacesmobile app typographypresentation materialsprojects needing Favorit's readability without its edge
Get Font ↗
#7 Geist 68%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Tech-focused grotesque with rational character that shares Favorit's contemporary positioning

Why it matches: Geist overlaps with Favorit in the space where contemporary tech aesthetics meet design consciousness. Both are neo-grotesques built for the current moment rather than referencing mid-century precedents, and both carry enough personality to feel intentional rather than generic. Geist is more explicitly engineered for developer-facing interfaces — its rationality is clinical where Favorit's rationality is art-directed. The match works best in tech and startup contexts where Favorit's quirkiness was incidental rather than the primary reason for selection.
tech startup brandingdeveloper tools and documentationdark-mode interfacescontemporary web applications
Get Font ↗

Related Pages