Mercury vs Times New Roman

Mercury and Times New Roman are both serif typefaces sharing a transitional foundation. Where Mercury leans editorial, Times New Roman brings retro. Compare which suits your Editorial project.

65% Similarity

Design DNA

Design overlap:50%

Mercury

Structural
Transitional
Visual
Readable
Purpose
Editorial

Times New Roman

Structural
Transitional
Visual
ReadableRetro

Highlighted traits are shared between both fonts

Visual Comparison

Mercury

Premium

Times New Roman

Premium

Feature Comparison

Feature Mercury Times New Roman
Type Premium Premium
Classification serif 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, cyrillic, greek
Source Hoefler&Co Monotype

Best Use Cases

Editorial

Typography suited for magazines, newspapers, and long-form content. Editorial fo...

Mercury Times
News & Journalism

Typography for news publications, journalism, and current affairs content. News ...

Mercury Times
Magazines

Typography for magazine design, periodicals, and print publications. Magazine fo...

Mercury Times
Web Design

Typography optimized for websites, landing pages, and web applications. Web font...

Mercury Times
Documents

Typography for business documents, reports, and professional communications. Doc...

Mercury Times
Academic

Typography for academic papers, research publications, and scholarly documents. ...

Mercury Times
Print Design

Typography optimized for printed materials, physical production, and offset or d...

Mercury Times

Which Should You Choose?

Recommended: Mercury

  • editorial design character
  • Suited for News and Magazines
  • From Hoefler&Co
  • 2 free alternatives available
View Mercury →

Consider: Times New Roman

  • retro design character
  • Suited for Documents and Academic
  • From Monotype
  • 2 free alternatives available
  • Broader language support
View Times New Roman →

Free Alternatives to Consider

Free fonts that can replace both Mercury and Times New Roman


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