A colorful collage of previous Amazon brand: web pages, banners, and ads, showcasing products, services, promotions, shopping events, and delivery options in a grid layout.
A cardboard Amazon box with an orange tape featuring the Amazon smile logo and the text Deals today. Cheer tomorrow. printed in white.
A dark gray Amazon delivery van with orange accents is parked on a road.
A grid of various Amazon app icons, including Prime Video, Alexa, Amazon Business, Amazon A to Z.
Outdoor billboard on a brick building reading ‘It’s all here,’ surrounded by product imagery and the Amazon smile arrow logo.
A cardboard Amazon package sits on a blue doormat in front of an open door.

Logotype

Simplifying the system

Having arrived at the new logo, we set about creating a consistent, manageable logo system to deploy across Amazon’s ecosystem.


Historically, teams “moved at the pace of Amazon,” spinning up businesses wherever there was a customer need. Logos were often developed quickly and independently, leading to a fragmented and inconsistent identity.


As part of refining the core logo, we redrew the original letterforms to correct typographic inconsistencies and bring greater precision. From that foundation, we built a complete custom alphabet - Amazon Logo Sans - providing a unified, scalable system for every sub-brand and future initiative.


Today, every logo across the brand is consistent, correct, and built in seconds, helping teams move faster without sacrificing brand integrity.

A collection of various Amazon logos and sub-brands arranged in a grid on a white background.
A person wearing a pink and green checkered sweater is lying on a couch, reading an e-reader. The word kindle with the Amazon smile logo below.

Color System

Bold colors, delivered.

Modernizing the Amazon brand was another of our objectives - and amplifying color was key to this work. First things first: unifying the many oranges across the brand into THE orange, Smile Orange. Its bold, vibrant hue matches the energy we were infusing into the brand, dialing up the colors up to 11 while also making them more accessible. Prime now has a more saturated, digital-first blue. And each Amazon sub-brand received the same treatment: expressive, confident, fun colors that match the spirit of Amazon today.

A colorful collage of Amazon Prime mobile promotional ads.

Typography

The type that ties it all together

Amazon’s typeface, Ember, was built for Kindle screens - not for a brand that operates in countless physical and digital environments across global markets. But as the company grew teams took on Ember as their own, despite it not being the best fit for their use cases. Often, they ended up mixing in other typefaces to compensate. Our evolved typeface, Ember Modern, was ambitiously designed with purpose. It meets the needs of a global typeface that needs to be bold, playful, and loud in high-impact marketing moments as well as subtle and quiet in more functional moments of the digital experience. The result? A typeface that serves everyone, and is critical in the transformation of the Amazon brand.

Bold Ember Modern font specimen showing uppercase letters A–Z, numbers 0–9, symbols, and currency signs.
Wall with Amazon marketing reading ‘Delivered with a smile.’
A large, bold, black letter M is shown with its sides overlapped by progressively narrower outlines.
A display for Ember Modern Text font, highlighting its styles, weights, and language options. The description emphasizes clarity and legibility for long-form reading and web use, with customer testimonials below.
Smartphone displaying an Amazon purchase screen.

From A to Я to あ

From A to Я to あ

In creating Ember Modern, we didn’t just design a beautiful typeface - we built a global tool for creative and operational excellence. At the heart of the Amazon rebrand was the challenge of unifying a company that ships to markets all over the world, and speaks to customers in hundreds of languages. To solve this, Koto partnered with NaN to design a typeface that could thrive across cultures, scripts, and contexts.

The result is a singular typographic system that includes support for 364 languages including English, Japanese, Latin, Cyrillic, and many more. Ember Modern delivers the clarity and consistency of a global brand while allowing for cultural nuance in every region. It’s expressive enough to headline a campaign and legible enough to guide someone through a digital checkout - no matter the market.

White Japanese characters and symbols on black, demonstrating the Ember Modern Japanese font.
Homelander in blue and red costume from The Boys, arms outstretched, large Arabic text behind, app icon and Arabic text in corners.
Arabic text in a rounded modern font describes Amazon as a US tech company founded in 1994, noting its role in e-commerce, cloud computing, AI, and its wide product range under the name Everything Store.
Four Amazon delivery boxes are stacked in front of a bright orange background. Large white Japanese text above reads “セール,” meaning “sale.” The Amazon smile logo is visible on each box.

Iconography

A Global Icon’s Global Icons

We developed a comprehensive iconography system to bring consistency, order, and a visual expression of ‘charm and disarm’ to Amazon’s vast ecosystem.

Historically, icons were created independently across teams, products, and regions, leading to a patchwork of styles and visual languages. Built as a global toolkit, Amazon’s icons now follow a single standardized approach - flexible enough to work across every cohort and sub-brand, but unified enough to feel unmistakably Amazon.

Technically, the icons are optimized for every size and touchpoint, performing with equal clarity from billboards to app screens. And like the rest of the identity, the icons are born from Amazon’s most recognizable elements — the smile and Ember Modern

A smartphone screen shows a shopping app with navigation icons for Home, Saved, Profile, Cart with 8 items, and Menu at the bottom.
Five icons with text: 2-hour grocery delivery window, curbside pickup available, one-click purchase, Luna controller setup, and sustainability feature. Each feature is paired with a simple corresponding icon.

Introducing cohorts

From confusion to cohorts

To help customers better navigate the Amazon ecosystem, the various sub-brands were internally organized into like-minded groups called cohorts. Our job was to consider the fixed points in Amazon’s identity system that would make these cohorts feel like part of the same overall family, and the flex points that would give the sub-brands in each cohort the ability to communicate with their customers appropriately. Our consistent but adaptable identity system allows Amazon to be united when promoting its house brands: bold, confident and expressive for the entertainment cohort; trustworthy and responsible for the health platform; refined, modern, and technical for devices; tasty and fresh for grocery. All while remaining undeniably Amazon.

A diagram showing Amazon’s brand hierarchy, with Amazon at the top, followed by sub-brands Prime and Alexa.
A collage of colorful Amazon marketing and app screenshots.

Cohort: Parent & Retail

Meet the parent brand

The core Amazon brand had begun to look a little jaded after 24 years of parenting. Today, customers are so used to finding exactly what they need in the Amazon app and having it delivered at warp speed. We take them for granted, but the truth is, what would we do without Amazon? We wanted to recapture that magical feeling of finding precisely what you need and having it on your doorstep, as soon as you need it.

The refreshed parent brand identity has an air of confidence, reclaiming its importance in customers’ lives. Bold, expressive headlines set in Ember Modern demonstrate a new found assuredness. Heroic product photography is front and center. Hallmark UI elements remind us of the simple power that’s in the palm of our hands.

A navy Lacoste bomber jacket with white stripes on the sleeves is displayed on a light blue background with the text Trending This Week. A rating card shows the product name and a 5-star rating.
Catalogue style graphic for Amazon Clothes ‘Modern Scholar,’ showing a man surrounded by labeled clothing items.
Person moving Amazon packages onto a cart outside a building.

Cohort: Prime

It’s on Prime

The relationship between Amazon and Prime provided one of our key challenges. For many people around the world, Amazon Prime serves as the first entry point to the Amazon ecosystem. Are you an Amazon customer, or a Prime member? Our goal became creating a clear role for Prime, which is all about providing access to the very best that Amazon has to offer.

With Prime, every aspect of Amazon is amplified. You can watch your favorite show or movie on Prime Video. You can get household items delivered same-day. You can get your prescription sorted as-soon-as-prime. Naturally, the Prime identity needed to match the Prime impact. The evolution included making Prime as expressive and celebratory as possible, with a bold new look that seamlessly integrates it within every cohort.

A hand holds a smartphone displaying the Prime Video app. The screen shows the movie Challengers at the top, with sections for Trending now and Top picks below it.
A man in amazon vest carrying a delivery package.
A hand reaches for one of two stacked Amazon delivery boxes, sealed with blue tape, on a blue surface against a blue wall.
"Pop Culture Jeopardy!" billboard in a city, featuring hosts with trivia cards and books, text about beating celebrities, with street scene below.
A woman in a teal dress stands on a stone balcony holding a sword, with a fantasy city and mountains in the background. App icons for Apple TV, Music, Prime Video, Podcasts, and App Store appear below.
A large blue Amazon Prime banner in Times Square advertises the new original series Fallout, showing characters in post-apocalyptic attire with explosions in the background.

Cohort: Grocery

So fresh and so green green

For some people who know Amazon as “the everything store,” high-quality, delicious, and curated food might not be the first thing that comes to mind. With our work for Amazon Grocery, we sought to address that challenge with a color palette, photographic style, and graphic system that’s fresh, tasty and food-forward, while still allowing space for value and convenience.

A large white number 2 with a dollar sign and .99 on a dark green background, surrounded by fresh red raspberries in the top left and right corners.
A ripe mango in front of bold green text that reads Ripe and cart-ready with the Amazon Fresh logo above.
A green Amazon Fresh billboard on a red brick wall reads, "Low prices? Checks out". Smaller text below says, New in your neighborhood.
A vibrant Instagram grid from Amazon Fresh features bright green backgrounds, fresh produce like carrots, ginger, cucumbers, and avocados, and bold text highlighting today’s recipe, deals, and announcements of lower prices.
Two slices of toast topped with avocado and cherry tomatoes sit above the large bold word Fresh. Promotional text in the top left reads, Elevate every bite. We keep it fresh so you can keep it interesting.
Bright green basket with the Amazon smile logo, filled with fresh produce
A yellow and red sale sign in a grocery store advertises organic D’Anjou pears at 2 for $5.49.
A smartphone screen displays the Amazon Fresh app.

Cohort: Devices

Alexa, so what happened next?

With our work for the Alexa and Devices identity, we showcase a refined, premium range of products that are powered by best-in-class technological innovation. Here a more elevated aesthetic is applied to the product design, packaging, and marketing, showing the flexibility of the brand system once again.

Close-up of a person’s ear wearing a white Amazon Echo earbud with the Amazon  logo. Text reads: amazon echo Full sound. Up to 20 hours battery life with charging case.
A black Amazon Echo smart speaker with a glowing blue base sits on a round wooden table next to a stack of books and a green leafy plant.
A billboard advertises Amazon Echo Pop speakers in three colors against a bright blue background with the words “Full sound” in large text and “Fresh colors” and the Amazon Echo logo below.
TV remote on the floor under a cabinet, glowing circle shows its location; text above says ‘Alexa, find me my remote.'
Amazon Alexa ad collage with the text ‘Meet the new Alexa.’

Cohort: Health

The picture of health

Healthcare is a newer offering for Amazon, and as a new entrant in this category it’s of course particularly important to build trust. Amazon is known for its dependability, and that trait is never more important than when dealing with patient health. So we took a straightforward approach, with clear messaging and a transparent, direct tone. Moments of illustration and photography that show patients living their lives (not spending time at the doctor's office or filling prescriptions) complement and soften the candid voice.

A person with glasses holds a smartphone and gestures while speaking outdoors. Large text reads “The doctor is in.” with the Amazon One Medical logo below.
An Amazon healthcare professional in navy scrubs uses a stethoscope to listen to a girl’s chest.
Smartphone displaying a medical app with a doctor visit and appointment details.
Large text lists medical topics (Allergies, Pediatrics, Therapy, Vaccines). Three profile cards for doctors, each with an appointment time, are placed over the text.
A person sits on concrete steps video-calling a medical professional via Amazon medical.
A padded white Amazon mailer with the Amazon smile logo and the text Easier than ripping off a bandage printed repeatedly in bold black letters.

Outcome

Amazon. The brand that delivers.

The rebrand gave Amazon back its center. What was once fragmented is now unified, so teams move faster, and customers feel the same confidence, whether streaming, shopping, or filling prescriptions. Infinite in scale, unmistakable in voice, Amazon delivers as one brand, with one smile, everywhere.

A colorful collage of various Amazon advertising images with diverse languages, product photos, discount messages, and slogans on vibrant backgrounds, featuring Amazon boxes, deals, food, electronics, and lifestyle shots.
Key stat: infographic showing billions of touchpoints, over 50 subsidiaries redesigned and unified, and more than 15 global marketplaces launched in six months, in an orange, white, and black color scheme.
Key stat: chart showing Koto brand restructure sentiment score rising to 2.2× in 2024, with the orange 2024 line above the gray 2023 line, highlighting accelerated brand recognition and recall.
Key stat: infographic comparing cost savings from 2023 to 2024, with a smaller peach block for 2023 and a larger orange block for 2024, highlighting improved marketing efficiency.

Amazon

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