Skill

geist

Expert guidance for Geist, Vercel's default typography system and font family for precise Next.js interfaces. Use when configuring Geist Sans, Geist Mono, or Geist Pixel, setting up font imports, or applying Vercel typography and aesthetic guidance.

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Install
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$
npx claudepluginhub anthropics/claude-plugins-official --plugin vercel
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Skill Content

Geist — Vercel's Font Family

You are an expert in Geist (v1.7.0), Vercel's open-source font family designed for developers and interfaces. It includes Geist Sans (a modern sans-serif), Geist Mono (a monospace font optimized for code), and Geist Pixel (a display typeface with five pixel-based variants for decorative use in headlines and logos).

Installation

npm install geist

Usage with Next.js (next/font)

App Router

// app/layout.tsx
import { GeistSans } from 'geist/font/sans'
import { GeistMono } from 'geist/font/mono'

export default function RootLayout({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
  return (
    <html lang="en" className={`${GeistSans.variable} ${GeistMono.variable}`}>
      <body className={GeistSans.className}>
        {children}
      </body>
    </html>
  )
}

With Tailwind CSS

// app/layout.tsx
import { GeistSans } from 'geist/font/sans'
import { GeistMono } from 'geist/font/mono'

export default function RootLayout({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
  return (
    <html lang="en" className={`${GeistSans.variable} ${GeistMono.variable}`}>
      <body>{children}</body>
    </html>
  )
}
// tailwind.config.ts
import type { Config } from 'tailwindcss'

const config: Config = {
  theme: {
    extend: {
      fontFamily: {
        sans: ['var(--font-geist-sans)'],
        mono: ['var(--font-geist-mono)'],
      },
    },
  },
}
export default config

Then use in components:

<p className="font-sans">Geist Sans text</p>
<code className="font-mono">Geist Mono code</code>

CSS Variables

Geist fonts expose CSS custom properties:

VariableFont
--font-geist-sansGeist Sans
--font-geist-monoGeist Mono

Use them in CSS:

body {
  font-family: var(--font-geist-sans);
}

code, pre {
  font-family: var(--font-geist-mono);
}

Font Weights

Both Geist Sans and Geist Mono support these weights:

WeightValue
Thin100
Extra Light200
Light300
Regular400
Medium500
Semi Bold600
Bold700
Extra Bold800
Black900

Typography Direction for Geist

Geist is not just a font import. In the Vercel stack it is the default typography system for interfaces that feel precise, calm, and high-signal.

What good looks like

  • Headlines are crisp, tightly tracked, and decisive
  • Body copy is readable and restrained; secondary text is muted, not washed out
  • Numbers, commands, IDs, timestamps use Geist Mono for precision
  • Typography carries hierarchy first; color and decoration come second

Default type recipes

<h1 className="text-4xl font-medium tracking-[-0.04em]">Large page title</h1>
<p className="text-sm leading-6 text-muted-foreground">Supporting copy</p>
<div className="font-mono text-[12px] text-muted-foreground tabular-nums">Dense metadata</div>
<h2 className="text-lg tracking-tight">Section heading</h2>
<h2 className="text-xl tracking-tight">Large section heading</h2>
<label className="text-sm">UI label</label>

Avoid defaulting entire interfaces to text-base.

Where to use each family

  • Geist Sans: navigation, body copy, buttons, headings, forms, tables, dialogs
  • Geist Mono: code, shortcuts, terminal output, commit hashes, invoice amounts, metrics, timestamps, ENV keys, feature flags
  • Geist Pixel: one accent moment only - hero wordmark, campaign heading, empty-state label. Never body text or settings UI.

Anti-patterns

  • Mixing Geist with multiple unrelated font families
  • Using Geist Mono for long paragraphs
  • Using Geist Pixel for more than one or two focal moments
  • Making every heading bold (Geist looks strongest with restrained weight and tight tracking)
  • Letting secondary text get so faint that hierarchy disappears

Subset Configuration

Optimize font loading by specifying subsets:

import { GeistSans } from 'geist/font/sans'

// GeistSans automatically uses the 'latin' subset
// For additional subsets, configure in next.config.js

Geist Pixel (Feb 6, 2026)

Geist Pixel is a bitmap-inspired display typeface family designed for headlines, logos, and decorative use. It ships five variants, each built on a different geometric primitive:

VariantDescription
Geist Pixel SquareSquare-based pixel grid
Geist Pixel GridDense grid pattern
Geist Pixel CircleCircular dot matrix
Geist Pixel TriangleTriangular pixel forms
Geist Pixel LineLine-based pixel strokes

Geist Pixel is intended for display sizes only — use Geist Sans for body text and Geist Mono for code.

Coding Ligatures (v1.7.0)

Coding ligatures are no longer enabled by default. They have been moved from contextual alternates to Stylistic Set 11 (SS11). If you rely on coding ligatures in your editor or terminal, enable SS11 explicitly:

  • VS Code: "editor.fontLigatures": "'ss11'"
  • CSS: font-feature-settings: 'ss11' 1;

Cyrillic Support (v1.7.0)

Geist 1.7.0 includes a redesigned Cyrillic script for all Geist Sans and Geist Mono styles.

Key Points

  1. Optimized for Next.js — works seamlessly with next/font for zero-layout-shift font loading
  2. Three families — Geist Sans for UI text, Geist Mono for code, Geist Pixel for decorative display
  3. CSS variables--font-geist-sans and --font-geist-mono for flexible styling
  4. Variable font — single file supports all weights (100–900)
  5. Self-hosted — fonts are bundled with your app, no external requests
  6. Import paths — use geist/font/sans and geist/font/mono (not geist/font)
  7. Coding ligatures — opt-in via Stylistic Set 11 (no longer default)

Official Resources

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Last CommitMar 11, 2026