The Webfont Generator from WhatFontIs lets you convert an authorized .ttf or .otf font into a WebFont kit (WOFF2/WOFF + CSS).
The system converts the font automatically.
In the ZIP file you’ll find an install example.
You should only convert fonts you’re licensed to use on websites (web embedding). If you downloaded a font, check its license (e.g., “webfont”, “@font-face”, or “WOFF2” permissions).
WOFF2 (Web Open Font Format 2) is a modern webfont format that offers better compression and faster loading compared to TTF and OTF fonts.
Converting fonts to WOFF2 reduces file size, improves website performance, and ensures better compatibility with modern browsers.
WOFF2 is supported by all modern browsers, including Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari. For older browsers, you may also want WOFF as a fallback.
No. Converting a font file does not change its license or usage rights. The original font license still applies.
That depends on the font’s license. If the license allows commercial web use, then yes.
Yes, as long as the font license allows it.
No. WOFF2 compression reduces file size without affecting visual quality.
Currently, you can convert one font at a time for best performance and accuracy.
Yes. Faster-loading webfonts improve page speed, which is a ranking factor and improves user experience.
After conversion, upload the WOFF2 file to your server and reference it using CSS @font-face.
A ZIP containing WOFF2 and WOFF files plus a CSS example with @font-face.
Your font is processed to generate the output. For retention and deletion details, refer to your Privacy Policy.
Both work. Upload the font file you have; the output webfonts are optimized for web use.
Upload the generated .woff2 (and optional .woff) files to your website (e.g., /fonts/ folder).
Use the provided CSS snippet (or copy it into your stylesheet) to define the font with @font-face.
Apply the font-family to your elements (e.g., body, headings, buttons) and keep a fallback stack.