# How to increase font size in a plot in R?

I am confused. What is the right way to increase font size of text in the title, labels and other places of a plot?

For example

x <- rnorm(100)
hist(x, xlim=range(x), xlab= "Variable Label",
ylab="density", main="Title of plot", prob=TRUE, ps=30)


The ps argument does not change font size (but it says in R Help for ?par that it is for "the point size of text (but not symbols)".

Also is it possible to separate changing the font size from the plotting function such as hist?

You want something like the cex=1.5 argument to scale fonts 150 percent. But do see help(par) as there are also cex.lab, cex.axis, ...

• Thanks! What is the difference with "ps=1.5"?
– Tim
Nov 22, 2010 at 2:44
• why cex=1.5 does not work? But have to specify for each part in terms of cex.lab, cex.axis, cex.main? What is cex=1.5 for?
– Tim
Nov 22, 2010 at 2:49
• Did you read help(par) about ps? Does not seem text-related as far as I can tell. Nov 22, 2010 at 2:51
• That's the way it is, in part surely for backwards compatibility with prior implementations of the S language. Nov 22, 2010 at 2:53
• cex is the magnification factor. The default value is 1. If you need to specify font sizes, you had better be prepared to dig into the documentation starting with ?Devices, ?pdfFonts, ?pdf, ?embedFonts, and many others. Nov 22, 2010 at 5:24

Thus, to summarise the existing discussion, adding

cex.lab=1.5, cex.axis=1.5, cex.main=1.5, cex.sub=1.5

to your plot, where 1.5 could be 2, 3, etc. and a value of 1 is the default will increase the font size.

x <- rnorm(100)


# cex doesn't change things

hist(x, xlim=range(x),
xlab= "Variable Lable", ylab="density", main="Title of plot", prob=TRUE)

hist(x, xlim=range(x),
xlab= "Variable Lable", ylab="density", main="Title of plot", prob=TRUE,
cex=1.5)


# Add cex.lab=1.5, cex.axis=1.5, cex.main=1.5, cex.sub=1.5

hist(x, xlim=range(x),
xlab= "Variable Lable", ylab="density", main="Title of plot", prob=TRUE,
cex.lab=1.5, cex.axis=1.5, cex.main=1.5, cex.sub=1.5)


• BTW, if you're trying to modify the axis in a bar chart (say for the variable importance plot in randomForest or GBM), you need to use cex.names (if you're a human who reads things from an upright position, you might also want las=2) Jan 12, 2016 at 20:13

By trial and error, I've determined the following is required to set font size:

1. cex doesn't work in hist(). Use cex.axis for the numbers on the axes, cex.lab for the labels.
2. cex doesn't work in axis() either. Use cex.axis for the numbers on the axes.
3. In place of setting labels using hist(), you can set them using mtext(). You can set the font size using cex, but using a value of 1 actually sets the font to 1.5 times the default!!! You need to use cex=2/3 to get the default font size. At the very least, this is the case under R 3.0.2 for Mac OS X, using PDF output.
4. You can change the default font size for PDF output using pointsize in pdf().

I suppose it would be far too logical to expect R to (a) actually do what its documentation says it should do, (b) behave in an expected fashion.

Notice that "cex" does change things when the plot is made with text. For example, the plot of an agglomerative hierarchical clustering:

library(cluster)
agn1 <- agnes(votes.repub, metric = "manhattan", stand = TRUE)
plot(agn1, which.plots=2)


will produce a plot with normal sized text:

and plot(agn1, which.plots=2, cex=0.5) will produce this one:

• Work in faces2 too (from Chernoff faces ) Jan 9, 2015 at 1:32
• In my example I had to apply cex not to plot but the inner object directly for an effect: plot(ci(roc(data$a, data$b, auc=TRUE, of="auc", print.auc=TRUE, print.auc.cex=1.5, plot=TRUE), of="thresholds", thresholds="best"))) Sep 10, 2017 at 18:26

I came across this when I wanted to make the axis labels smaller, but leave everything else the same size. The command that worked for me, was to put:

par(cex.axis=0.5)


Before the plot command. Just remember to put:

par(cex.axis=1.0)


After the plot to make sure that the fonts go back to the default size.

In case you want to increase the font of the labels of the histogram when setting labels=TRUE

bp=hist(values, labels = FALSE,
main='Histogram',
xlab='xlab',ylab='ylab',  cex.main=2, cex.lab=2,cex.axis=2)

text(x=bp$mids, y=bp$counts, labels=bp$counts ,cex=2,pos=3)  For completeness, scaling text by 150% with cex = 1.5, here is a full solution: cex <- 1.5 par(cex.lab=cex, cex.axis=cex, cex.main=cex) plot(...) par(cex.lab=1, cex.axis=1, cex.main=1)  I recommend wrapping things like this to reduce boilerplate, e.g.: plot_cex <- function(x, y, cex=1.5, ...) { par(cex.lab=cex, cex.axis=cex, cex.main=cex) plot(x, y, ...) par(cex.lab=1, cex.axis=1, cex.main=1) invisible(0) }  which you can then use like this: plot_cex(x=1:5, y=rnorm(5), cex=1.3)  The ... are known as ellipses in R and are used to pass additional parameters on to functions. Hence, they are commonly used for plotting. So, the following works as expected: plot_cex(x=1:5, y=rnorm(5), cex=1.5, ylim=c(-0.5,0.5))  Alternatively, you can change the resolution of the saved image with the res parameter of the graphics device: png(file = "myplot1.png", bg = "transparent", res = 100) plot(1:10) dev.off()  png(file = "myplot2.png", bg = "transparent", res = 200) plot(1:10) dev.off()  This will keep the same image size in pixels, but it will change the plot's aspect ratio, including font size. Just to add a simple example where I use cex to change several font sizes on the graph, including adding a subtitle inside the graph using the line command. par(cex=1, cex.main=2, cex.lab = 1.5, cex.sub=0.8) plot(gam_d13C_year, residuals = TRUE, pch = 1, mar=c(8, 2, 2, 2) + 1, bty="n") title(main = TeX('Effect of year in$\\delta ^{13}C\$'))
title(sub =paste(gam_d13C_year_stats),line = -2, adj = 0.5)