Skip to content
Skip to main content
Home / Fonts / Dharma Type / Kiro
Kiro

Kiro™

by Dharma Type
Individual Styles from $24.99 USD
Complete family of 12 fonts: $149.99 USD
Kiro Font Family was designed by Ryoichi Tsunekawa and published by Dharma Type. Kiro contains 12 styles family package options.

More about this family
FREE 30-DAY TRIAL of Monotype Fonts to get over 150,000 fonts from more than 1,400 type foundries. Start free trial
Start free trial

About the family


Kiro is a minimal, condensed sans-serif type family designed by Ryoichi Tsunekawa.
The family consists of 12 styles—six weights from Thin to ExtraBold, each with matching italics—offering versatility for titles, headlines, and body text.

With its large x-height, Kiro ensures strong legibility and readability, even at smaller sizes.
The design features a semi-modular structure, with minimal letterforms achieved by removing unnecessary stems, and subtly rounded corners that add a warm, approachable feel.

Kiro strikes a balance between contemporary, urbane precision and friendly character, making it ideal for a wide range of editorial and branding applications.

The typeface supports Western, Central, and South Eastern European languages, as well as Afrikaans.
It also includes superior/inferior figures, denominators, numerators, and fractions, all accessible through OpenType features.

Designers: Ryoichi Tsunekawa

Publisher: Dharma Type

Foundry: Dharma Type

Design Owner: Dharma Type

MyFonts debut: Jun 26, 2014

Kiro™ is a trademark of Dharma Type.

About Dharma Type

Dharma Type is a type design project launched in 2005 by Ryoichi Tsunekawa, aimed at providing exclusive fonts for designers around the world.The design styles span a wide spectrum—from retro and classic to experimental and futuristic, from formal to informal—reflecting the project's mission to fill niche demands in the design landscape.To date, Dharma Type has released around 100 Latin typefaces, including the widely popular Bebas Neue, an open-source font. Many of these typefaces have been featured in publications and used across a variety of media—ranging from movie titles (such as La La Land) to brand logos and posters.

Read more

Read less