# Our Official Stance on Including Brand Logos in Lucide ## TL;DR Lucide **does not accept** brand logos, and we do not plan to add them in the future. This is due to a combination of **legal restrictions**, **design consistency concerns**, and **practical maintenance reasons**. If you need brand logos, we recommend [Simple Icons](https://simpleicons.org/), which provides an extensive, legally safer collection of brand marks. --- ## 1. Historical Context This is not a new debate — other icon sets have gone through the same discussion: - **Material Design Icons** [deprecated all brand icons](https://github.com/Templarian/MaterialDesign/issues/6602) because they didn't fit the style, didn't work well in one color, and often looked out of place in a 24×24px grid. - **Feather Icons** [came to the same conclusion](https://github.com/feathericons/feather/issues/763): brand logos have their own style, and forcing them into another inevitably leads to aesthetic compromises. - **Lucide** learned from these examples — we'd rather focus on making a consistent set of non-brand icons that all work together. ## 2. Legal Considerations Most brand logos: - Are **protected by trademark or copyright**. - Have **strict rules** for how they can be used (colors, spacing, proportions, etc.). - **Don't allow modification** — but we'd have to change them to fit Lucide's style. This means adding them could: 1. Break copyright or trademark law. 2. Make both you and the Lucide project legally responsible. 3. Force us to review every new request one by one for legal issues — something we simply can't do. > **Note:** Simple Icons avoids this by keeping logos exactly as the brand provides them — though even they sometimes face [legal challenges](https://github.com/simple-icons/simple-icons/issues/11236). ## 3. Design & Consistency Lucide is all about **visual consistency**. Adding brand logos would: - Break [our own design rules](https://lucide.dev/guide/design/icon-design-guide#icon-design-principles) for shapes, proportions, and stroke. - Mix two fundamentally different categories of graphics (pictograms vs. corporate logos). - Create a library where a subset of icons will always look "out of place". If the logos are not in Lucide's style, why include them in Lucide at all? Better to use them from a dedicated brand icon source. ## 4. Maintenance Burden Even with our current **"no brand icon requests"** policy, people still request them regularly. Having any brand icons in the set: - Makes people think we might add more in the future. - Leads to repeated requests and the same conversations over and over. - Wastes maintainer time redirecting people to the same explanation. Removing them entirely solves this problem. ## 5. Recommended Alternatives If you need brand icons, try: - [Simple Icons](https://simpleicons.org/): offers a huge range of brands, in consistent SVG format, using a 24×24 viewBox, the same as ours. - Official brand asset pages: most major companies provide downloadable SVGs. You can use these alongside Lucide without bloating our core library. ## Final Words Lucide is an **icon** set, not a **logo** set. Logos belong in dedicated logo resources. We're focusing on what Lucide does best: providing a clean, cohesive, and legally safe collection of open-source icons.