It isn't Comic Sans. It isn't a grunge font. It is the . What is a "New Money Serif"? Let’s clarify the taxonomy. Old Money serifs (Times New Roman, Bookman, Caslon) smell of mahogany and dust. They are the fonts of law briefs, 19th-century novels, and your grandfather’s will.
are different. They are high-contrast, sharp, and digitally native. Think: Didot, Bodoni, GT Sectra, Editorial New, or Saol Text.
It signals that you have graduated from trying to look like Google (sans-serif) to trying to look like a modern Medici. It is the typography of the person who reads the prospectus and appreciates the binding.
If you use Bodoni for your body copy, you hate your users. Use it for impact (Headlines, Hero text, Logo marks). Save the sans for the fine print. The "New Money Serif" is not a font. It is a vibe shift .
That beautiful hairline serif that looks incredible at 72pt becomes a blurry mess at 12pt on a phone screen.
That’s fine. It’s clean. Are you switching to a high-contrast serif? That’s power. That’s new money. Do you agree? Have you swapped your Inter for a Garamond? Let me know in the comments.
For the past decade, the "Tech Bro" aesthetic ruled. It was Brutalist, sans-serif, and screamed: Helvetica. Neutral. Loudly Minimalist.
But look at the branding of 2024/2025. Something has shifted. From fintech startups to heritage bourbon brands and Gen-Z "old money" influencers, a new typographic sheriff is in town.

