Concourse vs Söhne
Concourse and Söhne are both sans-serif typefaces sharing a modern foundation. Where Concourse leans humanist, readable, Söhne brings neo-grotesque, minimal. Compare which suits your Editorial project.
Design DNA
Design overlap:14%
Concourse
Söhne
Highlighted traits are shared between both fonts
Visual Comparison
Concourse
PremiumPremium font preview not available
Visit the foundry website to see samples
Söhne
Premium
Feature Comparison
| Feature | Concourse | Söhne |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Premium | Premium |
| Classification | sans-serif | sans-serif |
| Variable Font | No | No |
| Weights | Multiple | Multiple |
| Italics | Yes | Yes |
| License | Commercial License Required | Commercial License Required |
| Language Support | latin, latin-extended | latin, latin-extended |
| Source | MB Type | Klim Type Foundry |
Best Use Cases
Typography suited for magazines, newspapers, and long-form content. Editorial fo...
Typography for established businesses, enterprise software, and professional ser...
Typography for business documents, reports, and professional communications. Doc...
Typography optimized for websites, landing pages, and web applications. Web font...
Typography for tech companies, software products, and digital innovation. Tech f...
Fonts that establish strong brand identity with distinctive character and versat...
Typography optimized for user interfaces, design systems, and digital products. ...
Typography for desktop and web applications, software interfaces, and digital to...
Where You'll See These Fonts
Söhne
- SaaS dashboards
- Developer tool interfaces
- Fintech product UIs
- Startup marketing sites
Which Should You Choose?
Recommended: Concourse
- humanist, readable design character
- Suited for Documents and Web
- From MB Type
- 3 free alternatives available
Consider: Söhne
- neo-grotesque, minimal design character
- Suited for Tech and Branding
- From Klim Type Foundry
- 8 free alternatives available
Browse by Context
Free Alternatives to Consider
Free fonts that can replace both Concourse and Söhne