Install and activate fonts

Last updated on Jun 2, 2026

Learn how to use Adobe Fonts, system installation, or auto-activation to access thousands of fonts in your Adobe InDesign projects.

InDesign provides multiple methods for making fonts available in your documents. You can activate fonts from Adobe Fonts, install fonts on your system, or use auto-activation to resolve missing fonts automatically when opening documents.

System-installed fonts become available to all applications on your computer, not just InDesign. To make fonts available only to InDesign, copy font files into the Fonts folder inside your InDesign application folder.

Turn on auto-activation of missing fonts

Select Edit > Preferences > File Handling (Windows) or InDesign > Preferences > File Handling (macOS).

Select Auto-activate Adobe Fonts.

Select OK. InDesign automatically activates missing fonts from Adobe Fonts when you open documents. The activation happens in the background. If all missing fonts are available in Adobe Fonts, they activate without interruption. If some fonts aren't available, InDesign displays the Missing Fonts dialog box, showing only fonts that couldn't be activated.

Select Window > Utilities > Background Tasks to monitor activation progress.

Activate fonts from Adobe Fonts

Select the down arrow icon beside the font name from the Character or Properties panel.

Select the Find More tab in the Fonts list.

An InDesign document showing the Fonts list and Find More tab highlighted.
Select the Find More tab to view the complete list of Adobe Fonts available.

Browse the available fonts or use the search field to find specific typefaces.

Hover over a font name to preview it applied to your selected text.

Select the Add icon next to the font name you want to use.

After activation completes, the font appears in your font menus with the font available icon. Activated fonts are compatible with all Creative Cloud applications and remain available until you deactivate them.

Tip

Visit fonts.adobe.com to browse the complete Adobe Fonts library and create collections of fonts for different projects.

Duplicate font names in InDesign

When multiple fonts share the same family name but have different PostScript names, InDesign displays them with technology abbreviations: Helvetica (TT) for TrueType, Helvetica (OTF) for OpenType, and so on.

Control substituted font highlighting

You can turn on the pink highlighting that identifies substituted fonts:

Select Edit > Preferences > Composition (Windows) or InDesign > Preferences > Composition (macOS).

Select or deselect Substituted Fonts under the Highlight section.

Select OK.

Tip

Keep substituted font highlighting enabled during document review to quickly identify areas that need font correction before final output.