My Gmail font suddenly changed 2022

Google is rolling out a new design for Gmail. Among the coming changes are a left-hand menu to quickly click into Chat, Spaces and Meet; easier filtering to find emails faster; and many shades of blue.

Google says the move is aimed at making it simpler to access different apps — like the company’s instant messenger or videoconference tool — from your Gmail inbox.

Google users aren’t strangers to sudden design and branding switches. In 2020, the company renamed its collection of apps from Google Suite to Google Workspace, and it’s continuously played with the names and logos of the accompanying video, chat and collaboration apps, perhaps in hopes of turning a collection of disparate products into one hub. Now, Gmail users can hop among apps easier, the company says.

“During the pandemic, we’ve seen a further evolution as tens of millions of people around the world started to move between email, messaging, group chat and video calls as a part of managing their daily lives,” Google product manager Neena Kamath said in a recent blog post. “To help people stay connected, we’re bringing together Gmail, Chat, Spaces and Meet in a single, unified view.”

The biggest changes to your Gmail won’t happen automatically — you’ll have to seek them out. To add Chat instant messages, Spaces collaboration rooms or Meet video calls to the new left-hand menu, open your Gmail inbox in a browser and click on the Settings icon (the tiny gear) in the upper right corner. Under “Apps in Gmail,” choose “Customize.” Choose which apps you want to add, and after reloading they’ll show up in the left-hand menu along with Mail and Spaces.

No wish to pile on the Gmail redesign but why do we have 7 shades of blue / lavender on one screen?🤔 Surely, _that_ wasn't a hard, politically fraught decision!

— Ravdeep Chawla (@ravdeepchawla) August 9, 2022

Google also said it’s adding “search chips” to the Gmail inbox. Those are buttons that help you refine your search when you’re looking for a particular message or attachment. The new chips button appears to show up next to the forward and backward arrows at the top of the inbox.

Gmail is one of the most widely adopted email services, with more than a billion users. But people’s loyalty to Google’s email product doesn’t mean they’re always happy with it. The company retired its practice of reading your emails to better target you with ads in 2017, but it won’t directly say whether its privacy protections prevent companies from putting tracking technology inside emails. Last year, Google ended its free photo storage, and some users now see an alert at the top of their inboxes saying they’ll soon run out of the 15 free gigabytes of storage that come with a Google account.

App redesigns are rarely a hit with the people who use them. If you want to switch back to the old version, go to Settings again and select “Go back to the original view.”

People are more obsessed with the number of shades of blue in the Gmail redesign while completely ignoring the wins their team made.
Redesigning a beloved app that is used by 1.5B people is not that easy.

— Akash (@0xAkashY) August 11, 2022

You’re probably sick of the Arial font, even if you don’t know it. As the default Gmail font—known as “sans-serif” in the Gmail interface—it’s the medium through which you’ve received years of spam, bills, entreaties from needy family members, and demands from bosses and colleagues.

Now the reign of Arial may be coming to a close. Earlier this week, The Verge and Android Authority reported that they’d obtained internal Google emails about an impending Gmail redesign. The Gmail product, despite (or perhaps because of) its popularity and ubiquity, hasn’t been redesigned since 2011, eons in internet years. The expected facelift appears to include a number of functional changes, including a “snooze” feature, that will temporarily remove a selected email from your inbox and then return  later, and more unified integration with Google Calendar.

But for font nerds, the big news is about the display. The Gmail interface font (menu items, for example) will change from Arial to Product Sans, while the default font for email and messages will change from Arial to Roboto. Both Product Sans and Roboto are fonts created by Google, and, if the leaked redesign comes to fruition, they’ll be a welcome change.

Product Sans is a Futura-like font that Google designed in 2015 for branding purposes; you may recognize it from the current Google logo, which replaced the old, serif-font logo also in 2015. Roboto resembles Arial or Helvetica; Google has been iterating on the font since 2011. It’s now the primary font in the Android operating system and, if the Gmail redesign is any indication, likely to become Google’s default across all its platforms.

Product Sans will be a relatively light design touch for things like headers and menus, but Roboto will impact the majority of words that hundreds of millions of people read every day. So it’s worth thinking about how our digital experiences of Gmail will change now that Arial’s out and Roboto’s in.

Both Arial and Roboto are modern-feeling, sans-serif fonts, and, letter by letter, they are fairly similar. Roboto does have a few small changes at the individual character level. The upper-case “Q” (Arial on the left, Roboto on the right) is probably the biggest change:

Capital

Capital “Q” in Arial (left) and Roboto.Image: Quartz

Another noticeable change is to the line in the dollar sign:

Dollar sign in Arial (left) and Roboto.

Dollar sign in Arial (left) and Roboto.Image: Quartz

Other character-level changes include switching out a square dot on the lower-case “i” and “j,” as well as the question mark, with a circular dot:

Question mark and lower-case

Question mark and lower-case “i” and “j” in Arial (left) and Roboto.

But really the biggest difference is in character spacing. Roboto’s characters are thinner than Arial, leaving more white space between each letter:

Letter tracking in Arial (top) and Roboto.

Character tracking in Arial (top) and Roboto.Image: Quartz

Character spacing may seem trivial , but it makes a huge difference in the feel of long blocks of text. I’m an editor who works primarily in Google Docs, where Arial is also the default font, and the first thing I do when I receive a new document is change the font I find Arial cramped and claustrophobic; I have a rotating set of fonts I use instead, including Roboto, a few others with even wider natural tracking, like my current favorite, Nunito. Below, from top to bottom, are Arial, Roboto, and Nunito:

Letter tracking in Arial, Roboto, and Nunito (from top to bottom).

From top to bottom: Arial, Roboto, and Nunito Image: Quartz

For most people, the difference between Arial and Roboto will show up most acutely on smartphones. Google’s Gmail decision is indicative of a broader shift by technology platform companies away from the familiar fonts of the desktop age—Arial and Helvetica prime among them—and toward new fonts designed specifically for mobile.

Google was actually the first to give mobile fonts a go with the Droid family of fonts, released in the late 2000s for its early smartphones. But those fonts didn’t look quite right when phone screen definition began to improve rapidly. Roboto was Google’s next effort; the first iteration of Roboto was released in 2011, and over the next few years, the company tweaked it until it landed, in 2015, on the version widely in use across its Android mobile operating systems.

Meanwhile, Apple released its own mobile-friendly sans-serif font, San Francisco, in 2014. By now, Helvetica Neue and Lucida Grande have been more or less entirely replaced by San Francisco as the default on Apple’s macOS and iOS. Apple, just like Google, went towards a taller, skinnier font with more breathing room (Helvetica Neue on the top, San Francisco on the bottom):

Letter tracking in Helvetic Nue (top) and San Francisco.

Letter tracking in Helvetic Nue (top) and San Francisco. Image: Quartz

Not everyone likes these mobile-first fonts. They tend to be a bit curvier—both Google and Apple have called their fonts “friendlier”—than their predecessors, which some designers say makes them harder to read. Design critics have specifically derided Roboto as an Arial rip-off, and initial public reaction to San Francisco was decidedly negative (though designers seemed to be at least okay with it). I for one welcome the invasion of airier, lighter-weight type.

Whatever your opinion, you will feel these Valley-designed operating system fonts on some level. Unlike your choice to use Garamond on your resume, or the new coffee shop’s decision to have their sign done up in Bodoni, Google’s selection of Arial has been washing over you every day, multiple times a day, for years. Now it’s time to bathe in Roboto.

What font is Gmail using now 2022?

Aside from the unmissable new font—Google Sans Text, which is inspired by basic geometries like circles—the biggest update is to its very left column. What was once a vertical mashup of your email directories, Chat, Spaces, and Meet, is now an app switcher.

Why is Gmail 2022 different?

Google says it wants to make it easier to switch among its apps. Google is rolling out a new design for Gmail. Among the coming changes are a left-hand menu to quickly click into Chat, Spaces and Meet; easier filtering to find emails faster; and many shades of blue.

Why does Gmail font look different?

This is because your settings in Gmail can affect how others see your messages. For instance, if you have a large body font size but an email has been sent from a phone with smaller text, it will appear small and hard to read.

Why does the font keep changing in Gmail?

there's nothing wrong with Gmail. The recipient's browser/email client settings determine how text is displayed.