One potentially valuable change could be the font, particularly considering you read thousands of words every time you turn on your PC. The ‘Segoe UI’ default typeface is absolutely fine, but it could use a refresh every once in a while. While there is a Fonts section in Settings, Microsoft removed the ability to freely change the default font in Windows 10. In this article, we’ll break down all the steps you’ll have to take. Be warned: This tutorial involves making changes to the Registry of the PC, so only proceed if you’re confident you know what you’re doing.
How to change the default font on Windows 10
Open ‘Settings‘ and head to ‘Personalisation‘Under the ‘Font‘ tab you’ll see a selection of different font families, including Arial, Verdana and TahomaClick the one you’d like and keep the window open – In a separate window open the Notepad app (search in the Start Menu if you can’t find it) Copy and paste the following:
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionFonts] “Segoe UI (TrueType)”=”” “Segoe UI Bold (TrueType)”=”” “Segoe UI Bold Italic (TrueType)”=”” “Segoe UI Italic (TrueType)”=”” “Segoe UI Light (TrueType)”=”” “Segoe UI Semibold (TrueType)”=”” “Segoe UI Symbol (TrueType)”=”” [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionFontSubstitutes] “Segoe UI”=”ENTER-NEW-FONT-NAME”
Click ‘File‘ and then ‘Save As‘. The file type will be set as .txt, but you’ll need to change this to all files. Choose whichever file name you’d like, but make sure you end it with .regHit ‘Save‘ and then head to the file explorer to locate the .reg file.Right-click and select ‘Merge‘, before hitting ‘Yes‘ to confirm and then finally ‘OK‘.Restart your device and the new font should be applied.
How to restore the default system font
If you’d like to reverse these changes, it probably comes as little surprise that you’ll need to tweak the registry. – Open up Notepad once more and paste the following into the text file: – Hit ‘File‘ and then ‘Save As‘ – Select the ‘All Files‘ file type, naming it anything you want provided it ends with .reg, and then ‘Save‘. – Locate the file and right-click before selecting ‘Merge‘. Confirm by clicking ‘Yes‘ and then ‘OK‘. – Restart your device to restore the font back to how it was originally. Want to install more fonts? Check out our guide to How to install fonts on Windows 10. As the resident expert on Windows, Senior Staff Writer Anyron’s main focus is PCs and laptops. Much of the rest of his time is split between smartphones, tablets and audio, with a particular focus on Android devices.