Free Alternatives to SF Pro Display for Technology

7 alternatives | 2 highly relevant | sans serif | Best match: Geist (84%)

Looking for a free sans serif font for technology projects? SF Pro Display by Apple is a popular choice, but its licensing cost can be prohibitive. We've curated 7 free alternatives that work well in technology contexts. We've identified 2 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
Geist 44 84% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Inter 25 88% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Noto Sans 23 72% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
DM Sans 16 80% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Roboto 16 78% Variable Yes Apache-2.0 Google Fonts ↗
Source Sans 3 16 76% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗
Public Sans 15 74% Variable Yes OFL-1.1 Google Fonts ↗

Most Relevant (2)

#1 Geist 84% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Vercel's system font with similar tech-forward aesthetics and screen optimization

Why it matches: Geist was designed by Basement Studio for Vercel with the same goal SF Pro serves at Apple: a modern system font tuned for developer tools and product interfaces. Both share a low stroke contrast, generous x-height, and carefully rationalized letter-spacing. Geist's slightly tighter proportions and sharper terminals give it a more technical edge than SF Pro's softer DIN-influenced curves, but the overall reading rhythm in UI contexts is remarkably similar. Both fonts excel at rendering code documentation alongside prose.
developer tool interfacesSaaS product dashboardstechnical documentationstartup marketing sites
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#2 Inter 88% Relevant
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Closest open-source match with variable font support and similar screen-optimized proportions

Why it matches: Rasmus Andersson built Inter explicitly "for computer screens," and that mission statement overlaps almost perfectly with Apple's goals for SF Pro. The critical parallel is optical sizing: SF Pro switches between Display and Text variants based on rendered point size, automatically tightening spacing and adding stroke detail at large sizes while widening counters at small ones. Inter replicates this behavior through its variable font optical sizing axis — a continuous version of the same idea. The practical result is that both typefaces adapt to the jump from a 13px sidebar label to a 48px hero headline without manual tracking adjustment. Where SF Pro is locked to Apple's Core Text renderer and legally restricted to the Apple ecosystem, Inter renders consistently across Chrome, Firefox, and every operating system, making it the standard bridge for teams designing SF Pro-quality interfaces that must also ship on Android and Windows.
cross-platform app interfacesdesign system foundationsdata-dense dashboardsdeveloper documentation sites
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Other Alternatives (5)

#3 Noto Sans 72%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Google's universal font with unmatched language coverage and consistent screen rendering

Why it matches: Noto Sans shares SF Pro Display's mission of universal legibility — Google designed it to cover every Unicode script, just as Apple designed SF Pro to work across every Apple device. Both typefaces feature a moderate x-height, clean grotesque forms, and consistent typographic color. Noto Sans is slightly more mechanical in its construction and lacks SF Pro's DIN-influenced warmth, but its unmatched language coverage (900+ languages) makes it indispensable for truly global products where SF Pro's script coverage falls short.
multilingual global productsinternationalized web applicationsenterprise platforms with CJK requirementscross-script design systems
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#4 DM Sans 80%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Geometric-leaning grotesque with clean proportions that echo SF Pro's friendly precision

Why it matches: DM Sans shares SF Pro Display's balance between geometric construction and grotesque warmth. Both avoid the stark geometry of Futura or the rigid neutrality of Helvetica, landing in a middle ground that reads as modern and approachable. DM Sans is slightly rounder in its bowls and has more open counters, giving it a marginally softer personality. The `o`, `e`, and `c` shapes are structurally compatible, and both typefaces handle mobile interface text — buttons, labels, navigation — with similar clarity at 14-17px.
mobile app typographyconsumer product interfacesmarketing landing pageslightweight brand systems
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#5 Roboto 78%
[Google Fonts] · Apache-2.0 · Variable

Google's system font with comparable screen optimization and UI heritage

Why it matches: Roboto is to Android what SF Pro is to iOS — a system font engineered for screen legibility across a vast range of devices and contexts. Both share a hybrid construction that blends grotesque and geometric elements, with open counters optimized for small-size rendering. Roboto's slightly more mechanical character and wider proportions distinguish it from SF Pro's DIN-influenced curves, but the functional overlap in UI contexts is substantial. Both handle data tables, navigation systems, and form elements with the same utilitarian clarity.
cross-platform mobile appsMaterial Design implementationsenterprise web applicationsdata-heavy interfaces
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#6 Source Sans 3 76%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Adobe's workhorse sans with strong hinting and broad language coverage

Why it matches: Source Sans 3 matches SF Pro Display's commitment to legibility through generous apertures, careful hinting, and a rational construction. While SF Pro leans toward geometric warmth, Source Sans 3 adds subtle humanist touches that improve readability in long-form content. Its extensive language support and Adobe's rigorous quality assurance make it reliable across diverse rendering environments. The weight distribution from ExtraLight to Black parallels SF Pro's comprehensive range.
enterprise applications with multilingual needsgovernment and institutional sitesdocumentation systemscross-browser web applications
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#7 Public Sans 74%
[Google Fonts] · OFL-1.1 · Variable

Government-grade neutrality with accessibility-first screen optimization

Why it matches: Public Sans was built by the U.S. Web Design System team with goals that closely parallel Apple's for SF Pro: maximum screen legibility, neutral character, and reliable rendering across devices. Both typefaces prize functional clarity over stylistic personality. Public Sans is slightly wider-set and more austere than SF Pro, optimized for the accessibility requirements of government digital services. The neutral character of both fonts makes them interchangeable in contexts where clarity and compliance matter more than brand distinctiveness.
accessible web applicationsgovernment and institutional portalscompliance-focused interfacesform-heavy enterprise tools
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