: A Google-commissioned font that is metrically compatible with Arial. Liberation Sans
: A 10-digit numerical code used by operating systems to find a visual match if a specific font is missing. For example, if a document requires Helvetica but it's not installed, the system uses the PANOSE classification to suggest Arial as a "Normal Sans" replacement. Licensing and Legal Downloads Arial is a proprietary typeface owned by Monotype Imaging
. This naming convention combines the font name, its weight (Normal/Regular), its character set (Western/Latin-1), and its
is sometimes offered for free as part of supplemental language packs for Windows users.
: Most web browsers can display Arial without extra downloads because it is a "web-safe" font. Commercial Licensing
: This is the standard, non-bold, non-italic version of Arial. It was designed in 1982 by Robin Nicholas and Patricia Saunders for Monotype Typography
: Created by Red Hat to be a functional replacement for Arial in Linux environments.
and Apple's macOS. If you own these operating systems, you already have a legal license to use it. Microsoft Store : A variant called Arial Nova
: A Google-commissioned font that is metrically compatible with Arial. Liberation Sans
: A 10-digit numerical code used by operating systems to find a visual match if a specific font is missing. For example, if a document requires Helvetica but it's not installed, the system uses the PANOSE classification to suggest Arial as a "Normal Sans" replacement. Licensing and Legal Downloads Arial is a proprietary typeface owned by Monotype Imaging
. This naming convention combines the font name, its weight (Normal/Regular), its character set (Western/Latin-1), and its Arial Normal Western Panose Font Free Download
is sometimes offered for free as part of supplemental language packs for Windows users.
: Most web browsers can display Arial without extra downloads because it is a "web-safe" font. Commercial Licensing : A Google-commissioned font that is metrically compatible
: This is the standard, non-bold, non-italic version of Arial. It was designed in 1982 by Robin Nicholas and Patricia Saunders for Monotype Typography
: Created by Red Hat to be a functional replacement for Arial in Linux environments. Licensing and Legal Downloads Arial is a proprietary
and Apple's macOS. If you own these operating systems, you already have a legal license to use it. Microsoft Store : A variant called Arial Nova