Free Alternatives to Knockout Supporting Latin Extended

8 alternatives | display | Best match: Oswald (82%)

Need a free alternative to Knockout with Latin Extended script support? These 8 options include Latin Extended characters and share visual similarities with Knockout. Each is licensed for free personal and commercial use.

Top Picks

Comparison Table

Font Relevance Similarity Weights Variable License Source
Oswald 0 82% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Bebas Neue 0 79% 1 No OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Barlow 0 76% 9 No OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Fjalla One 0 74% 1 No OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Anton 0 72% 1 No OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Raleway 0 70% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Montserrat Alternates 0 70% 9 No OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Montserrat 0 68% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗

All Alternatives (8)

#1 Oswald 82%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Closest free condensed gothic with strong display character and variable font support

Why it matches: Oswald is the most direct free approximation of Knockout's condensed gothic personality. Both typefaces feature narrow proportions, sturdy construction, and the kind of no-nonsense display character that dominates sports and editorial headlines. Oswald's proportions most closely match Knockout's middle-width styles (around No. 49-50), giving it comparable density and impact in single-column headlines. The variable font support with a continuous weight range from 200-700 provides flexibility that Knockout's static files achieve through its width-based system. Oswald lacks Knockout's multi-width architecture — the defining feature of the Knockout family — but for projects using a single condensed width, Oswald delivers comparable impact.
sports and athletic headlinescondensed display typographyeditorial feature headlinesposter and event display
Get Font ↗
#2 Bebas Neue 79%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · 1 weights

Bold condensed all-caps display font with strong impact and widespread recognition

Why it matches: Bebas Neue captures the raw display impact that Knockout brings to poster and headline contexts. Both typefaces project strength and directness through condensed proportions and sturdy vertical strokes. Bebas Neue's all-caps design focuses entirely on display impact, matching the tone of Knockout's boldest weights and narrowest widths used in sports and entertainment graphics. The limitation is significant — Bebas Neue is uppercase only, lacks true lowercase forms, and ships in a single weight. For all-caps headlines and display treatments where Knockout would typically be set in uppercase anyway, Bebas Neue provides comparable visual impact at zero cost.
all-caps display headlinesposter and event typographysports and entertainment graphicsbold single-word impact treatments
Get Font ↗
#3 Barlow 76%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · 9 weights

Versatile sans-serif family with condensed variant matching Knockout's narrower widths

Why it matches: Barlow offers something rare among free sans-serifs — a width system that partially mirrors Knockout's multi-width architecture. The Barlow family includes standard, Semi Condensed, and Condensed variants, each with a comprehensive weight range. This width variation, while not matching Knockout's nine distinct widths, provides more width flexibility than any other free alternative. Barlow Condensed's proportions approximate Knockout's medium-width styles, while Barlow Semi Condensed handles contexts where Knockout's wider styles would be used. The grotesk construction shares Knockout's industrial personality, making it a practical substitute for editorial and display contexts that need width variety.
editorial layouts needing width varietymulti-format display systemsindustrial and sports-adjacent brandingresponsive display typography
Get Font ↗
#4 Fjalla One 74%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · 1 weights

Condensed display sans-serif with commanding presence for headlines

Why it matches: Fjalla One captures the commanding, attention-grabbing quality of Knockout's boldest condensed styles. Both typefaces are designed to dominate headline spaces with narrow proportions and heavyweight strokes. Fjalla One's single-weight design focuses entirely on bold display impact, making it most comparable to Knockout's Heavyweight or Sumo styles. The slightly more organic construction — with subtle stroke width variation and rounded terminals — gives Fjalla One a marginally warmer personality than Knockout's more mechanical precision. For bold headline applications where Knockout would be set heavy and condensed, Fjalla One provides a credible free substitute.
bold condensed headlinessports and event displayposter and signage typographysingle-weight display applications
Get Font ↗
#5 Anton 72%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · 1 weights

Ultra-condensed display sans with maximum headline impact

Why it matches: Anton pushes condensed display typography to its most extreme, matching the visual impact of Knockout's narrowest, heaviest styles. Both typefaces command attention through sheer density — narrow proportions packed with heavy strokes that dominate any layout. Anton's proportions most closely approximate Knockout's No. 27-28 (Junior Welterweight and Junior Middleweight) styles in their narrowest expressions. The single-weight, all-caps-optimized design limits versatility, but for maximum-impact headlines and display treatments where Knockout would be used at its most extreme, Anton delivers comparable visual force.
maximum-impact display headlinesposter and billboard typographysports and entertainment brandingultra-condensed display treatments
Get Font ↗
#6 Raleway 70%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Geometric display sans with elegant proportions available in condensed styles

Why it matches: Raleway offers an alternative approach to Knockout's display function — where Knockout achieves impact through condensed density, Raleway uses geometric elegance and a broad weight range. The typeface's thin-to- black weight spectrum (100-900) provides the hierarchical flexibility that Knockout achieves through its width system, allowing designers to create visual contrast through weight rather than width. Raleway's proportions are wider than Knockout's, shifting the personality from athletic density to sophisticated geometry. For display contexts where Knockout's specific condensed character is less important than the ability to create bold, attention-commanding headlines, Raleway is a versatile alternative.
sophisticated display typographyeditorial headlines with geometric characterfashion and lifestyle brandingversatile display hierarchies
Get Font ↗
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · 9 weights

Montserrat variant with softer, curved alternate letterforms

Get Font ↗
#8 Montserrat 68%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Geometric sans-serif with strong display presence and comprehensive weight range

Why it matches: Montserrat approaches display typography from a geometric rather than condensed direction, but shares Knockout's core purpose — commanding attention in headline contexts. The eighteen-weight family (nine weights plus italics) provides the kind of typographic system that Knockout achieves through its unique width architecture. Montserrat's wider proportions lack Knockout's condensed density, but the bold and extra-bold weights create comparable visual impact in display contexts. For editorial and branding projects where the condensed aesthetic is not essential, Montserrat offers Knockout's headline authority through a more universally applicable geometric framework.
editorial display systemsbrand identity headlinescross-platform display typographyversatile headline hierarchies
Get Font ↗

Related Pages