Στιγμιότυπο οθόνης 2026 05 08 062721

Optimal Logo Size for a Website: 2026 Guide

Logos aren’t just design elements. They’re how a website says, “Hey, this is me.” Yet I keep seeing the same problem over and over: distorted, blurry, oversized or just plain awkward logos. If the header looks like a banner ad from 2005 or your favicon is a smudge in the browser tab, something’s off. I wrote this guide to fix that.

I’ve spent over a decade building brands with Turbologo, watching what works and what turns visitors away. What follows is a practical, brutally clear breakdown of what logo sizes actually make sense in 2026 — and why.

Why logo size matters more than ever

Visual clarity is no longer a “nice-to-have.” It’s a baseline expectation. On high-resolution displays, a subpar logo feels unprofessional. On mobile, bloated images slow down the site. And when users bounce in under three seconds, your logo doesn’t get a second chance.

A well-sized logo:

  • Loads fast
  • Looks sharp on any screen
  • Doesn’t mess with your layout
  • Signals competence without saying a word

Most small business owners never think about logo sizes until it breaks something. So let’s get to fixing it.

Header logo sizes that just work

Here’s the rule of thumb I give my clients: design your header logo display size around 250 x 100 pixels. That’s what looks good on most desktop websites. But don’t upload a logo that size — your site needs twice the resolution to look crisp on Retina screens. So your upload size should be 500 x 200 pixels.

Use Case Display Size Upload Size
Desktop header 250 x 100 px 500 x 200 px
Mobile header 150 x 50 px 300 x 100 px
Favicon 16 x 16 px 512 x 512 px
Email signature 320 x 80 px 640 x 160 px

Expert tip

Want to avoid resizing headaches down the road? Always design in SVG format first. SVGs are resolution-independent and scale perfectly. Then export PNGs for specific use cases.

The mobile trap (and how to dodge it)

Mobile design isn’t just about shrinking things. It’s about clarity at smaller scale. A logo that looked fine on desktop might become unreadable when compressed into a phone screen.

What I do: I test logos in a real mobile layout before signing off. Reduce the height, simplify the shape if needed, and give it breathing room. On mobile, I prefer logos no wider than 150 px.

Favicon: the overlooked brand ambassador

This tiny icon in the browser tab punches above its weight. Yet many websites either skip it or use a pixelated blob.

Your favicon should be square, minimal, and high-res. I always upload at 512 x 512 px to futureproof it, then let platforms resize. Use your icon mark, not the full logo text. At 16 px, text becomes mush.

Logo sizes for emails, PDFs, and beyond

Your website isn’t the only place your logo appears. Think email signatures, invoices, presentations.

A good standard: 640 x 160 px PNG. It works across most platforms and still looks sharp when scaled down. Keep file size under 100 KB — or it’ll slow down your email loading.

Don’t forget the file formats

Here’s how I break it down:

  • SVG — use it everywhere you can (website headers, favicons, CSS embeds)
  • PNG — for emails, documents, social media
  • JPG — only for photos or background-heavy variants

Avoid GIF unless you’re doing something quirky on purpose.

Real-world example: making a logo that fits everywhere

Let’s say you’re launching a new consulting brand. You generate a logo with an AI logo maker (like Turbologo), and you need it to look clean across your site, socials, email, and pitch deck.

Instead of resizing each time, build a master kit:

  • SVG original for website header and retina rendering
  • 500 x 200 px PNG for fallback display
  • 512 x 512 px favicon version
  • 640 x 160 px email version

Get that right once, and you won’t have to think about logo size again.

Common mistakes (and how to sidestep them)Στιγμιότυπο οθόνης 2026 05 08 062826

 

  1. Uploading too small: Leads to blurry logos on high-res screens
  2. Skipping SVG: Locks your design into fixed sizes, poor scalability
  3. Overstuffed header: A tall logo eats into navigation space
  4. Favicon with text: It won’t be readable

Advice from experience

If you ever wonder why your site “feels off” but can’t explain it, look at the logo. Oversized logos subtly shift everything. Fix the logo, and suddenly your layout breathes.

Final checklist

  •  Start with an SVG master
  •  Use 2x upload sizes for sharpness
  •  Keep width under 250 px (desktop), 150 px (mobile)
  •  Upload 512 x 512 favicon
  •  Stick to PNG/SVG unless there’s a strong reason not to

FAQ

What’s the best logo size for a website header?
Display size: 250 x 100 px. Upload size: 500 x 200 px for retina clarity.

Should I use SVG or PNG for logos?
Use SVG whenever possible — it scales cleanly. PNG is great as a fallback or for emails.

What size should my favicon be?
Upload at 512 x 512 px to ensure clarity across all platforms.

Why does my logo look blurry on mobile?
You likely uploaded a low-resolution image. Double your intended display size to fix it.

How do I create a logo in the right size?
Use an AI logo maker like Turbologo. It gives you all formats and sizes you need right out of the box.

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