Signature Generator for Your Name
Type your name and see it in 26 handwritten and cursive styles tuned to short or long names. Download a free signature as SVG or PNG — no account, commercial use included.
A signature built around your name
A generic signature template rarely fits the name you actually sign. A signature generator for your name starts from your name as you type it and renders it across 26 handwriting and cursive styles, so you can see which one suits the length, letters, and feel of your name before you download.
Signaturegen does this for free, with no account. Type your name, compare styles live, and download the one you like as an SVG or PNG — yours to use anywhere, commercial use included.
Turn your name into a signature in three steps
1. Type your name
Enter your full name, your first name, or your initials. The preview updates as you type, so trying another version costs nothing.
2. Browse styles tuned to your name
See your name in all 26 styles at once and pick the one that flatters its length and letters, in the ink color you want.
3. Download and use it
Download an SVG or PNG and add it to documents, email, slides, or the web.
Find a style that fits your name
Some styles flatter short names; others handle long ones gracefully. A few rules of thumb:
Short names and initials
Bold, expressive scripts like Yellowtail, Satisfy, and Dancing Script give a short name presence so it doesn't look sparse. Initials pair well with formal scripts for a monogram feel.
Long or multi-part names
Compact, even cursives like Caveat, Kalam, and Sacramento keep a long name legible without trailing off the line.
Formal versus casual
Great Vibes, Allura, and Pinyon Script lean formal and elegant; Indie Flower and Patrick Hand feel relaxed and handwritten.
Signature ideas by name length and vibe
Not sure where to start? A few pairings worth previewing:
- Short, punchy name → a bold script for weight (Satisfy, Yellowtail).
- Long full name → a compact cursive that stays readable (Caveat, Sacramento).
- Just initials → a formal script as a simple monogram (Allura, Great Vibes).
- Creative or personal brand → relaxed handwriting that feels human (Indie Flower, Kalam).
First name, full name, or initials — which to sign?
There's no single right answer; it depends on context. A full name reads as more formal and is common on contracts and official documents. A first name, or first name plus last initial, feels approachable for email and creative work. Initials are quick and work well where space is tight, like form fields.
Because previews are instant, the easiest approach is to type each version — full name, short name, initials — and see which one looks the most like you.
Download formats and where to use them
- PNG (transparent background): drops cleanly into Word, Google Docs, slides, and email.
- SVG (vector): stays sharp at any size — ideal for print and large displays.
Free, private, and yours
The signature generator is free with no account required, and the result is yours to use commercially. Live previews render on demand and aren't saved. A paid plan (Standard $9.90/year, Premium $19.90/year) adds a private library, premium styles, and higher-resolution exports when you want them.