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How to Create a Brand Style Guide in 2026 (Free Template)
Updated February 27, 2026 · 13 min read
A brand style guide is the single document that keeps your visual identity consistent across every touchpoint โ website, social media, packaging, ads, and internal documents. Without one, your brand slowly drifts into visual chaos. Here's exactly what to include and how to build one from scratch.
Logo Usage Guidelines
Your logo section should answer every possible question about how, where, and when to use your logo. The goal is to make it impossible for anyone to misuse it.
What to Include
Primary logo: The default version used in most contexts. Show it on light and dark backgrounds. Specify the file formats available (SVG, PNG, PDF).
Logo variations: Horizontal, stacked, icon-only, and wordmark-only versions. Define when each is appropriate. Example: "Use the icon-only version when space is less than 40px wide."
Clear space: The minimum padding around the logo where no other elements can appear. Define this as a proportion of the logo (e.g., "clear space equals the height of the letter 'S' in the wordmark").
Minimum size: The smallest the logo can be displayed while remaining legible. Example: "Minimum width: 80px digital, 20mm print."
Don'ts: Show explicit examples of incorrect usage โ stretching, recoloring, rotating, adding effects, placing on busy backgrounds, or altering proportions.
Logo File Format Guide
| Format | Use Case | Background | Scalable |
| SVG | Website, apps, responsive design | Transparent | Yes (infinite) |
| PNG | Social media, email, documents | Transparent | No (fixed resolution) |
| PDF | Print, business cards, packaging | Transparent | Yes (vector) |
| EPS | Professional print, signage | Transparent | Yes (vector) |
| JPEG | Not recommended for logos | White/solid only | No |
Color Palette System
A professional color palette includes primary, secondary, and neutral colors with exact values for every medium.
Color Categories
Primary colors (1-2): Your main brand colors used in logos, headers, and CTAs. These are the colors people associate with your brand. Example: Coca-Cola red, Spotify green.
Secondary colors (2-3): Supporting colors for accents, highlights, and variety. They complement the primary palette without competing. Used in illustrations, icons, and secondary UI elements.
Neutral colors (3-5): Backgrounds, body text, borders, and subtle UI elements. Typically a gray scale plus a near-black for text and a near-white for backgrounds.
Semantic colors: Success (green), warning (yellow/amber), error (red), info (blue). Define these so UI states are consistent across your product.
Color Documentation Template
| Color Name | HEX | RGB | HSL | CMYK | Usage |
| Brand Orange | #FF5F1F | 255, 95, 31 | 17, 100%, 56% | 0, 63, 88, 0 | Primary CTA, logo, headers |
| Brand Gold | #FF9F1F | 255, 159, 31 | 34, 100%, 56% | 0, 38, 88, 0 | Accents, highlights, hover states |
| Dark Surface | #0A0A0F | 10, 10, 15 | 240, 20%, 5% | 33, 33, 0, 94 | Page backgrounds |
| Text Primary | #E8E8F0 | 232, 232, 240 | 240, 24%, 93% | 3, 3, 0, 6 | Headings, primary text |
| Text Secondary | #CCCCCC | 204, 204, 204 | 0, 0%, 80% | 0, 0, 0, 20 | Body text, descriptions |
Accessibility rule: All text-background color combinations must meet WCAG 2.1 AA contrast ratios: 4.5:1 for body text, 3:1 for large text (18px+ or 14px+ bold). Use a contrast checker like WebAIM to verify every combination in your palette.
Typography Standards
Define every text style used in your brand โ from hero headlines to button labels. Consistency here is what separates professional brands from amateur ones.
Type System Template
| Element | Font | Weight | Size (Desktop) | Size (Mobile) | Line Height | Color |
| Display / Hero | Montserrat | 800 | 48-64px | 32-40px | 1.1 | #FFFFFF |
| H1 | Montserrat | 700 | 36-48px | 28-36px | 1.2 | #FFFFFF |
| H2 | Montserrat | 600 | 28-32px | 22-28px | 1.3 | #FFFFFF |
| H3 | Montserrat | 600 | 20-24px | 18-22px | 1.3 | #DDDDDD |
| Body | Open Sans | 400 | 16-18px | 16px | 1.6-1.8 | #CCCCCC |
| Caption | Open Sans | 400 | 12-14px | 12px | 1.4 | #999999 |
| Button | Montserrat | 600 | 14-16px | 14px | 1.0 | #FFFFFF |
Typography Rules
- Maximum 2 font families โ one for headings, one for body text
- Maximum 4 font weights โ loading more slows page performance
- Use variable fonts when available to reduce file size and gain precise weight control
- Never stretch, compress, or outline text โ use the font as designed
- Body text minimum 16px โ smaller text fails accessibility and readability
- Maximum line width: 75 characters โ set max-width on text containers accordingly
Imagery & Photography Style
Your imagery guidelines ensure every photo, illustration, and graphic feels like it belongs to the same brand.
Photography Guidelines
Color temperature: Define warm vs. cool tone. Example: "All brand photography uses warm tones with slightly lifted shadows. Avoid blue-tinted or desaturated looks."
Lighting: Define the style. Example: "Natural light preferred. Soft, diffused lighting for portraits. No harsh flash or studio setups that feel clinical."
Composition: Define framing rules. Example: "Use rule of thirds. Leave breathing room around subjects. Avoid centered compositions except for hero shots."
Subject matter: Define what's on-brand. Example: "Real people in authentic settings. No stock-photo poses. Diverse representation required. No isolated white backgrounds."
Editing style: Define post-processing. Example: "Slight grain, +10 warmth, slightly desaturated greens. Never over-sharpen or use HDR effects."
Illustration & Icon Guidelines
- Style: Flat, line, 3D, or isometric โ pick one and stick with it
- Stroke weight: Define consistent line thickness (e.g., 2px for icons at 24x24)
- Color: Icons should use the brand color palette only
- Corner radius: Define rounded vs. sharp corners for consistency
- Grid: All icons built on the same grid (typically 24x24 or 20x20)
Tone of Voice & Messaging
Voice is your brand's personality in words. Tone is how that personality flexes across different contexts (support email vs. Instagram caption vs. error message).
Voice Attributes
Define 3-5 attributes that describe how your brand speaks. For each, show what it means and what it does NOT mean.
| Attribute | We Are | We Are Not | Example |
| Direct | Clear, concise, actionable | Blunt, cold, robotic | "Your file is ready" not "We are pleased to inform you that your download has been prepared" |
| Friendly | Warm, approachable, human | Overly casual, unprofessional | "Need help? We're here" not "Yo what's up hit us up" |
| Confident | Expert, decisive, trustworthy | Arrogant, salesy, pushy | "The best tool for the job" not "You'd be stupid not to use this" |
| Inclusive | Accessible, welcoming, diverse | Patronizing, exclusionary | "Everyone can create" not "Even beginners can do it" |
Tone Across Contexts
| Context | Tone | Example |
| Marketing / landing pages | Confident, energetic | "Create stunning designs in minutes." |
| Social media | Casual, playful | "That feeling when the edit is chef's kiss." |
| Support / help docs | Patient, clear | "Click Settings, then select Export. Choose PNG." |
| Error messages | Calm, helpful | "Something went wrong. Try again or contact support." |
| Email | Friendly, personal | "Hey [Name], your project is ready to download." |
Complete Style Guide Checklist
Use this checklist to ensure your brand style guide covers everything. Check each item as you build it.
- Brand overview โ Mission, vision, values, and brand story (1 page max)
- Logo primary โ Full-color logo on light and dark backgrounds
- Logo variations โ Horizontal, stacked, icon-only, wordmark-only
- Logo clear space โ Minimum padding defined proportionally
- Logo minimum size โ Digital (px) and print (mm) minimums
- Logo don'ts โ 6-8 examples of incorrect usage
- Primary colors โ 1-2 colors with HEX, RGB, HSL, CMYK values
- Secondary colors โ 2-3 supporting colors with all values
- Neutral palette โ Background, text, and border colors
- Semantic colors โ Success, warning, error, info
- Accessibility โ WCAG contrast ratios for all text/background combos
- Heading font โ Family, weights, sizes, line heights
- Body font โ Family, weights, sizes, line heights
- Type scale โ Complete hierarchy from H1 to caption
- Photography style โ Color, lighting, composition, subject rules
- Illustration style โ Stroke, color, corners, grid
- Icon set โ Style, sizes, stroke weight, grid
- Voice attributes โ 3-5 personality traits with examples
- Tone guide โ How voice adapts across contexts
- Writing dos/don'ts โ Specific language rules and examples
- Social media templates โ Post, story, and cover templates
- Email templates โ Header, footer, button styles
- File downloads โ Logo pack, color swatches, font files
Format tip: Build your style guide in Figma, Notion, or as a website โ not a PDF. Living documents get updated. PDFs get forgotten. Include direct links to download logo files, font files, and templates.
Generate Your Brand Color Palette
Create harmonious color palettes with HEX, RGB, and HSL values. Free, no signup, export instantly.
Open Color Palette Generator →
FAQ
How long should a brand style guide be?
A minimum viable style guide is 5-10 pages covering logo, colors, typography, and voice. A comprehensive guide for a mature brand runs 20-40 pages and includes imagery, templates, and detailed usage examples. Start lean and expand as your brand grows. The best style guide is the one your team actually reads and follows.
What tools can I use to create a brand style guide?
Figma (free) is the best tool for visual style guides โ it's collaborative, includes design components, and generates a shareable link. Notion works well for text-heavy guides with embedded images. For a polished deliverable, use Canva's brand guide template. Avoid Word/Google Docs โ they handle visual content poorly.
How often should I update my brand style guide?
Review quarterly, update as needed. Major updates happen when you rebrand, enter new markets, or launch new products. Minor updates happen when you add new social platforms, adjust colors for accessibility, or expand your icon set. Version your guide (v1.0, v1.1) and announce updates to your team.
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