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We have a little problem with fonts in PDF documents. In order to put the finger on the problem I'd like to inspect, which fonts are actually embedded in the pdf document and which are only referenced. Is there an easy (and cheap as in free) way to do that?

4 Answers 4

194

pdffonts command line tool originally from Xpdf, now part of Poppler.

This tool is available in most Linux distributions as part of poppler-utils package.

Example usage and output:

$ pdffonts some.pdf 

name                                 type              emb sub uni object ID
------------------------------------ ----------------- --- --- --- ---------
BAAAAA+Arial-Black                   TrueType          yes yes yes     53  0
CAAAAA+Tahoma                        TrueType          yes yes yes     28  0
DAAAAA+Wingdings-Regular             TrueType          yes yes yes     43  0
EAAAAA+Webdings                      TrueType          yes yes yes     38  0
FAAAAA+Arial-BoldMT                  TrueType          yes yes yes     33  0
GAAAAA+Tahoma-Bold                   TrueType          yes yes yes     23  0
HAAAAA+OpenSymbol                    TrueType          yes yes yes     48  0
7
  • to avoid linkrot, please include an example and/or some doc. Jan 28, 2014 at 18:49
  • It seems to have been installed by default on my Lubuntu 14.10 installation.
    – DaAwesomeP
    Mar 22, 2015 at 22:41
  • 14
    For mac users, brew install poppler to easily get the pdffonts command Mar 2, 2016 at 3:00
  • 1
    In evince document viewer, go to File --> properties --> Fonts tab
    – Lnux
    Dec 17, 2016 at 5:53
  • Note: on Windows, pdffonts can be installed as part of the Poppler chocolatey package chocolatey.org/packages/poppler Mar 3, 2021 at 9:41
97

Many PDFs include the font names in plain text.

To check this in Unix/Linux/macOS, run this from a terminal:

strings yourPDFfilepath.pdf | grep FontName
5
  • 12
    Windows: findstr FontName yourPDFfilepath.pdf
    – Craigo
    May 25, 2012 at 3:57
  • 14
    Doesn't work for me. (Mac with PDF generated by latex.) pdffonts shows two embedded fonts; this shows none. Evidently, this method works some times, but is not reliable.
    – Mike
    Apr 22, 2013 at 14:49
  • try with lowercase f on fontName Nov 27, 2013 at 20:48
  • @texnic Try this. Right click and open the file in a text editor (e.g. Notepad) and search for FontName.
    – Kevin Lee
    Apr 19, 2017 at 4:07
  • FontName wasn't found in a PDF I just tried. Just looking for grep -i font gave : /BaseFont /Helvetica Jun 29, 2021 at 8:46
53

I finally got an example file that actually seems to have fonts embedded.

Using the normal Adobe Reader (or Foxit if you prefer). Select File->Properties on the resulting Dialog choose the Font tab. You will see a list of fonts. The ones that are embedded will state this fact in ( ) behind the font name.

1
  • Does this tab exist in the Mac version? I can't find it, I have a Mac ) :
    – Derrops
    Sep 30, 2021 at 4:18
5

CAM::PDF has a font reporter, available as a command-line utility or via a library call. If you run "listfont.pl file.pdf" you get output like this:

Page 1:
  Name: F1.0
    Type: TrueType
    BaseFont: NZUXSR+Impact
    Encoding: MacRomanEncoding
    Widths: yes
      Characters: 0-255
    Embedded: yes
  Name: F2.0
    Type: TrueType
    BaseFont: XSFKRA+ArialMT
    Encoding: MacRomanEncoding
    Widths: yes
      Characters: 0-255
    Embedded: yes

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