APA Font Requirements: Which Fonts Are Accepted in 2026

APA 7th edition accepts six specific fonts — not just Times New Roman. The manual expanded the approved list to give researchers and students more flexibility, while keeping the core requirement: your font must be consistent throughout the paper and legible at the chosen size.


APA Approved Fonts and Sizes (2026)

FontRequired sizeCategory
Times New Roman12 ptSerif
Georgia11 ptSerif
Computer Modern10 ptSerif (LaTeX default)
Calibri11 ptSans serif
Arial11 ptSans serif
Lucida Sans Unicode10 ptSans serif

Source: APA Publication Manual, 7th Edition, Section 2.19.

Each font has its own required point size — they are not interchangeable. Arial at 12 pt is not correct; Arial at 11 pt is. This pairing matters because the fonts were selected at sizes that produce similar visual weight on the page.

Which Font Should You Choose?

All six are equally valid under APA rules. The choice comes down to your institution’s requirements and the context of your paper:

FontBest forNotes
Times New Roman 12 ptPrinted submissions, traditional academic journalsMost widely expected in North American universities
Calibri 11 ptDigital submissions, modern institutional templatesMicrosoft Word’s default since Office 2007
Arial 11 ptAccessibility, presentations, hybrid documentsHigh legibility on screen and in print
Georgia 11 ptOnline reading, digital-first papersDesigned specifically for screen rendering
Computer Modern 10 ptSTEM papers written in LaTeXLaTeX default; only relevant if you’re using that typesetting system
Lucida Sans Unicode 10 ptPapers requiring extended Unicode character setsUseful for linguistics, non-Latin scripts

When in doubt, use Times New Roman 12 pt. It is the font most professors and reviewers expect, even after APA 7 expanded the approved list.

Font Rules by Section

Use the same font and size throughout the paper with three exceptions:

ElementFont rule
Body textYour chosen APA font at the specified size
Headings (all levels)Same font as body — size does not increase
Figure textA sans serif font (Arial, Calibri) at 8–14 pt for readability
Computer codeMonospaced font (Courier New, Lucida Console) — size not specified
FootnotesSame font as body; may be slightly smaller (10 pt minimum)

How to Set Your Font in Word

  1. Select all text: Ctrl + A.
  2. In the Home tab, click the Font dropdown and type or select your font name.
  3. Set the size in the size field next to the font name.
  4. To save this as your default: go to Home → Font dialog launcher → Set As Default → All documents based on the Normal template.

Watch out: If your document was assembled from multiple sources (copy-pasted from PDFs, emails, or other documents), different sections may carry embedded font formatting. Use Ctrl + A → clear formatting → reapply your font to reset everything cleanly.

Bold, Italics, and Underline in APA

APA has specific rules for text emphasis — most students apply these incorrectly:

Emphasis typeWhen to use in APA
BoldHeadings only; statistical terms in some contexts (e.g., M = 3.5 when introducing a new term)
ItalicsBook/journal titles, technical terms on first use, non-English words, statistical symbols (p, n, t)
UnderlineNot used in APA 7 — it was a typewriter-era substitute for italics
ALL CAPSNot used for emphasis; only in abbreviations that are conventionally uppercase

APA 6th vs 7th Edition: Font Changes

APA 6th edition required only Times New Roman 12 pt. APA 7th edition expanded the list to six fonts. This is one of the most significant formatting changes between editions for students updating older papers.

If your institution’s template still specifies Times New Roman, use Times New Roman — institutional requirements override the APA manual’s expanded list.

Fonts That Are NOT Accepted in APA

The APA manual does not provide an exhaustive list of prohibited fonts, but these are commonly misused and outside the approved list:

FontWhy it fails
Comic SansNot on the approved list; informal appearance
Courier NewOnly approved for code samples, not body text
GaramondNot in APA 7’s approved list despite being popular
HelveticaNot listed; Arial is the equivalent that IS approved
ImpactDisplay font; not suitable for academic text
CambriaNot listed in APA 7; formerly common in Word templates

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use different fonts for headings and body text?

No. APA requires a single consistent font throughout the paper. Headings are differentiated from body text through bold, italics, and alignment — not by switching fonts.

What font does APA recommend for LaTeX users?

Computer Modern at 10 pt — the LaTeX default. APA explicitly included it in the approved list to accommodate researchers using LaTeX. You do not need to install or specify it separately if you are using a standard LaTeX setup.

My university’s template uses Cambria. Should I change it?

Follow your university’s template. If they provide an official document with Cambria, that template has been approved by your institution and takes precedence over APA’s list. Contact your writing center or thesis office if you’re unsure.

Does font choice affect my APA score or grade?

It depends on the grader. Most professors won’t penalize Calibri vs. Times New Roman as long as both are from the approved list. However, submitting in a non-listed font (Garamond, Helvetica, Cambria) could result in a formatting deduction if your professor grades APA compliance strictly.

For the complete APA 7th edition formatting checklist — margins, spacing, page numbers, and title page — see the APA Format Guide.

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