Wavy fonts move where other fonts hold a straight line. The character comes from how a typeface treats its strokes, whether through soft inner corners, looped terminals, or constructed angle systems, and the result is letters with built-in motion. The list below covers ten typefaces that handle that movement well, ending with two free Google Fonts.
1. Auria Sans: Airy Sans with Soft Inner Corners

A modern sans-serif with soft inner corners that give it a wavy, airy character. The alternates extend the range further: multiple r terminals, rounded options for A, M, and W, and circular dots for punctuation. Suited to logos and longer text in beauty, jewelry, and clean fashion work. Nine weights with a variable font.
2. Lace: Loopy Handwritten Typeface (Regular and Rounded)

A loopy typeface for modern, branded lettering. The strokes stay uniform and only vary with weight, which keeps the handwritten character consistent across the family, chunky in heavier weights and lace-like in the lighter ones. The Rounded cut softens the corners further for a fuller, more bubble-friendly read.
Both cuts suit restaurant, beauty, and editorial brand work that needs a personal but considered tone.
3. Skay: Inky Handwritten Bubble Font

An all-uppercase handwritten font with an inky brush feel. Stylistically close to the Skims logo. Made for beauty and fashion branding that wants a confident, personal voice. Nine weights from light to bold.
4. Cesty: Friendly Rounded Display

A bold rounded display with a friendly feel. Heavier weights read as soft and full; lighter weights bring a more springy, open character. Works across logos, posters, packaging, and menus where the brand wants bold without austerity. Nine weights and a variable font.
5. Kijs: Nature Serif with Brush-Style Alternates

A nature-inspired serif with inked counters, wavy variance, and cursive i and j alternates that give it an earthy quality. The lighter weights feel sophisticated; the heavier weights gain flow through their rounded terminals. Nine weights and a deep set of alternates for hand-drawn or refined results depending on the swap.
6. Miox: Groovy Bubble Font

A chunky bubble font with an inky feel in the lighter weights and a 70s character in the heavier ones. The rounded forms and handwritten touch make it well-suited to bakeries, retro packaging, quirky jewelry, beauty, and music titles. Nine weights with a strong set of alternates for customization.
7. Vole: Geometric Sans with Fluid Counters

A geometric sans-serif with rounded counters and a fluid interior shape. The wave reads quietly at headline scale and disappears at small sizes, which lets Vole work as a brand-system typeface rather than a one-note display font. Nine weights with a variable.
8. Swav: Constructed Wavy Display

A constructed wavy font built around strokes that lock at fixed angles. The alternative binder letters let you chain glyphs cleanly across a word, which is the structural detail that makes one-line wavy logos work. Suited to retro, Y2K, and futuristic identity work. Nine weights from Thin to Black.
9. Tilt Warp (Free, Google Fonts)
A variable font on Google Fonts built around warping. Letters bend and stretch along design axes, so the wavy character can be tuned to context rather than baked in. A capable display option when a commercial license is out of scope.
10. Lobster (Free, Google Fonts)
A connected script with bold looping curves. Widely recognized and well-supported on Google Fonts. Works for warm, casual brands and food packaging where the layout has room for the type to breathe.
How to pick one
For subtle wave that survives body text, Auria Sans or Vole. For editorial flow with elegance, Kijs. For visible motion and personality, Miox, Skay, or Lace. For a future-leaning logotype, Swav. Tilt Warp is the strongest free option when budget rules out a commercial license.
For softer, rounded shapes without the wave, see the soft fonts post. For seasonal picks, see the spring fonts post.