Headings
A successful type hierarchy establishes the order of importance of elements on a page. Consistent scaling, weights, and capitalization are used to create distinction between heading levels and provide users with familiar focus points when scanning text.
Web headings
At screen widths of 600px and below, the Display heading and Headings 1-4 drop in size. Heading 5 remains consistent at all screen widths.
Display
Heading 1
Heading 2
Heading 3
Heading 4
Heading 5
Specs
Heading | Specs | Responsive behavior at < 601px |
---|---|---|
Display | Avenir Next Regular, 48px / 60px | Drops to Heading 1 |
Heading 1 | Avenir Next Demi Bold, 34px / 42px | Drops to Heading 2 |
Heading 2 | Avenir Next Demi Bold, 26px / 32px | Drops to Heading 3 |
Heading 3 | Avenir Next Regular, 22px / 28px | Drops to Heading 4 |
Heading 4 | Avenir Next Medium, 18px / 22px | Drops to 16px / 18px |
Heading 5 | Avenir Next Demi Bold, 14px / 18px, All caps, 1px letter spacing | No change |
Print headings
This hierarchy should serve as a basis for 8.5 x 11” documents, but appropriate scaling should be explored for content of larger or smaller dimensions.
Display
Heading 1
Heading 2
Heading 3
Heading 4
Heading 5
Heading 6
HTML code snippet
<h1 style="font-size:60pt; font-weight:500; line-height:66pt">Display</h1>
<h1 style="font-size:38pt; font-weight:400; line-height:40pt">Heading 1</h1>
<h2 style="font-size:26pt; font-weight:400; line-height:28pt">Heading 2</h2>
<h3 style="font-size: 16pt; font-weight:600; line-height: 18pt">Heading 3</h3>
<h4 style=font-size:14pt; font-weight:500; line-height:16pt">Heading 4</h4>
<h5 style="font-size:10pt; font-weight:600;line-height:12pt">Heading 5</h5>
<p style="font-size: 12pt; font-weight: 500; line-height:14pt">Heading 6</p>
Specs
Heading | Specs |
---|---|
Display | Avenir Next Medium, 60pt / 66pt |
Heading 1 | Avenir Next Regular, 38pt / 40pt |
Heading 2 | Avenir Next Regular, 26pt / 28pt |
Heading 3 | Avenir Next Demi Bold, 16pt / 18pt |
Heading 4 | Avenir Next Medium, 14pt / 16pt |
Heading 5 | Avenir Next Demi Bold, 10pt / 12pt, all caps |
Heading 6 | Avenir Next Medium, 12pt /14 pt |
Variations
The heading variations below have specific use cases.
The meta header is typically used for listing categories on pages like the blog page.
HTML code snippet
<div class="m-meta-header">
<div class="m-meta-header__item-group">
<div class="m-meta-header__item">
Office of Research Publication
</div>
<div class="m-meta-header__item">
Policy and compliance
</div>
</div>
<div class="m-meta-header__item">
<span class="a-date">
Published
<span class="datetime">
<time datetime="2024-09-28T00:00:00">SEP 28, 2024</time>
</span>
</span>
</div>
</div>
Specs
- Avenir Next Medium, 18px
- View a list of icons. Icon height is constrained to 19px.
The eyebrow heading is an additional label that can be used to support the main H1 heading on a page, provide additional context, or orientation when necessary. Use the eyebrow heading to label page headings that are part of a larger group of related pages, or when additional context can help orient the user to the page’s purpose.
The eyebrow heading is secondary to and serves to support the main page heading. So it should be concise and shorter than the main page heading.
An example of the eyebrow heading can be found on the Buying a House journey pages.
Slug headings are used to call attention to and lead content on sidebars and prefooters, inset modules, and inset email modules.
Slug heading
Guidelines
Content
- Headings should be sentence case.
- Do not include punctuation in headings.
- Keep headings to one line on desktop when possible.
Spacing
Refer to the Guidelines section of the Fonts page for information about heading spacing.
Accessibility
Since categories can be repetitive, we suggest placing a label with .u-visually-hidden
prior to the headings with icons to add more context for screen readers.