

Vincent Connare designed the Trebuchet font in 1996. Its rounded appearance in a few capital letters and most of its lowercase letters makes it “ideal for children’s books, school use, and language teaching.” Its sans-serif format makes it legible for dyslexics.

Century GothicĬentury Gothic was designed in 1990 and it is influenced by geometric sans-serif styles from the 1920s and 1930s. “to address the challenges of on-screen display, particularly in small sizes in dialogue boxes and menus. This font is similar in appearance to Verdana except that the letters appear taller. Matthew Carter also created the Tahoma font for Microsoft in 1995 and it was re-released in 2006. It was designed for legibility on computer, phone and tablet screens as well as legibility in printed form. Verdana was designed by Matthew Carter in 1994 and released by Microsoft in 1996. While a lot of people have scorned at this font for being childish and unprofessional, it is still legible for people with dyslexia because as its name suggests. It was inspired by typefaces used for comics and graphic novels. Vincent Connare created this font in 1994. Our blog contributor April uses this font to type Microsoft Word documents because she thinks it is an easy font for those with dyslexia to read. Robin Nicholas and Patricia Saunders created the font for IBM in 1982. This is a very popular sans-serif font that is legible for dyslexics.

Ablerado Gonzalez created this font in order “to help dyslexic readers.” 2. It is considered dyslexia-friendly because it is mostly sans-serif. We have used this font in the thumbnail designs for our YouTube videos. Here are our top dyslexia-friendly fonts: 1. A dyslexia-friendly font is a font that is easy for people with dyslexia to read.
