Infographic Design Principles
This reference covers the fundamental design principles for creating effective, professional infographics.
Overview
Infographic Design Principles
This reference covers the fundamental design principles for creating effective, professional infographics.
Visual Hierarchy
Visual hierarchy guides the viewer's eye through your infographic in a deliberate order, ensuring key information is seen first.
The Hierarchy Pyramid
-
Primary Elements (Seen First)
- Headlines and titles
- Large numbers or key statistics
- Hero images or main illustrations
- Call-to-action elements
-
Secondary Elements (Seen Second)
- Subheadings and section titles
- Charts and graphs
- Icons and visual markers
- Key supporting text
-
Tertiary Elements (Seen Last)
- Body text and descriptions
- Legends and labels
- Source citations
- Fine print and footnotes
Creating Hierarchy
Size: Larger elements attract attention first
- Headlines: 200-300% larger than body text
- Key stats: Make numbers 2-4x larger than labels
- Important icons: 1.5-2x larger than supporting icons
Color: Bright and contrasting colors draw the eye
- Use accent colors sparingly for emphasis
- Reserve the brightest color for the most important element
- Use muted colors for supporting information
Position: Top-left and center are seen first
- Place most important content at top or center
- Supporting details toward bottom or edges
- Reading flow: top-to-bottom, left-to-right (in Western cultures)
Contrast: High contrast elements stand out
- Dark on light or light on dark for key text
- Colored elements against neutral backgrounds
- Borders and shadows to lift key elements
White Space: Isolation draws attention
- Surround important elements with space
- Don't crowd key information
- Use spacing to group related items
Layout Patterns
F-Pattern Layout
Best for: Text-heavy infographics, lists, articles
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ ████████████████████████████████████│ ← Top horizontal scan
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ █████████████████ │ ← Second horizontal scan
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ █████ │
│ █████ │ ← Vertical scan down left
│ █████ │
│ █████ │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Place headline across full width at top
- Important subhead on second line
- Key content aligned to left
- Less critical content on right
Z-Pattern Layout
Best for: Minimal content, landing pages, single-message infographics
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ ●────────────────────────────────→ ●│ ← Start top-left, scan right
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ ╲ │
│ ╲ │ ← Diagonal scan
│ ╲ │
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ ●────────────────────────────────→ ●│ ← Bottom left to right
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Logo/headline top-left
- Key visual top-right
- Diagonal eye movement through center
- Call-to-action bottom-right
Single Column Layout
Best for: Mobile-friendly, scrolling content, process infographics
┌───────────────┐
│ HEADER │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 1 │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 2 │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 3 │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 4 │
├───────────────┤
│ FOOTER │
└───────────────┘
Application:
- Vertical scrolling content
- Step-by-step processes
- Timeline infographics
- Mobile-first design
Multi-Column Layout
Best for: Comparisons, feature lists, complex data
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ HEADER/TITLE │
├──────────────┬──────────────────────┤
│ Column 1 │ Column 2 │
│ -------- │ -------- │
│ Content │ Content │
│ Content │ Content │
│ Content │ Content │
├──────────────┴──────────────────────┤
│ FOOTER │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Side-by-side comparisons
- Pros and cons lists
- Feature matrices
- Two categories of information
Grid Layout
Best for: Multiple equal-weight items, statistics, icon grids
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ HEADER/TITLE │
├───────────┬───────────┬─────────────┤
│ Item 1 │ Item 2 │ Item 3 │
├───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┤
│ Item 4 │ Item 5 │ Item 6 │
├───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┤
│ Item 7 │ Item 8 │ Item 9 │
├───────────┴───────────┴─────────────┤
│ FOOTER │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Multiple statistics (2x2, 3x3, 2x3 grids)
- Icon collections
- Feature highlights
- Team member displays
Modular/Card Layout
Best for: Varied content types, flexible information, modern designs
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ HEADER/TITLE │
├───────────────────┬─────────────────┤
│ │ Card 2 │
│ Card 1 ├─────────────────┤
│ (large) │ Card 3 │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┤
│ Card 4 │ Card 5 │
└───────────────────┴─────────────────┘
Application:
- Mixed content types
- Varied importance levels
- Modern dashboard style
- Magazine-style layouts
The 60-40 Rule
The optimal infographic balances visual and text content:
- 60% Visual Elements: Icons, charts, illustrations, images, shapes
- 40% Text Content: Headlines, labels, descriptions, data
Why This Matters
- Too much text: Feels like a document, not an infographic
- Too many visuals: Lacks substance and clarity
- Right balance: Engaging AND informative
Applying the Rule
Visual Elements (60%)
- Charts and graphs
- Icons and symbols
- Illustrations
- Photos
- Decorative shapes
- Color blocks
- Lines and connectors
Text Elements (40%)
- Headlines and titles
- Subheadings
- Data labels
- Brief descriptions
- Source citations
- Calls to action
White Space (Negative Space)
White space is the empty area between and around elements. It's not wasted space—it's a design tool.
Functions of White Space
- Improves Readability: Gives eyes rest between content
- Creates Focus: Isolated elements attract attention
- Groups Content: Related items appear connected
- Adds Elegance: Premium feel to design
- Reduces Clutter: Prevents overwhelming viewers
White Space Guidelines
Margins: Space around the entire infographic
- Minimum 5-10% of width/height
- More margin = more premium feel
- Consistent on all sides
Padding: Space inside elements (boxes, cards)
- Minimum equal to text line height
- More padding for important elements
- Consistent within similar elements
Gaps: Space between elements
- Related items: Small gaps (8-16px)
- Unrelated items: Large gaps (24-48px)
- Sections: Largest gaps (48-72px)
Line Spacing: Space between lines of text
- Body text: 1.4-1.6x font size
- Headlines: 1.1-1.3x font size
- Lists: 1.5-2x font size
Typography
Font Selection
Sans-Serif Fonts (Recommended for Infographics)
- Clean, modern appearance
- Better screen readability
- Professional feel
- Examples: Arial, Helvetica, Open Sans, Roboto, Montserrat
Serif Fonts (Use Sparingly)
- Traditional, authoritative feel
- Good for headlines in formal contexts
- Examples: Georgia, Times New Roman, Playfair Display
Display Fonts (Headlines Only)
- High impact for titles
- NOT for body text
- Examples: Impact, Bebas Neue, Oswald
Font Pairing Rules
- Maximum 2-3 fonts per infographic
- Contrast is key: Pair different styles (serif + sans-serif)
- Establish roles: One for headlines, one for body, one for accents
- Maintain consistency: Same font for same purpose throughout
Safe Pairings:
- Montserrat (headlines) + Open Sans (body)
- Playfair Display (headlines) + Roboto (body)
- Bebas Neue (headlines) + Lato (body)
- Oswald (headlines) + Source Sans Pro (body)
Font Sizes
| Element | Size Range | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Main Title | 36-72pt | Bold |
| Section Headers | 24-36pt | Bold/Semi-bold |
| Subheadings | 18-24pt | Semi-bold |
| Body Text | 12-16pt | Regular |
| Captions/Labels | 10-14pt | Regular/Light |
| Fine Print | 8-10pt | Light |
Typography Best Practices
- Left-align body text (easier to read than centered)
- Center-align headlines (for impact)
- Limit line length to 45-75 characters
- Use bold sparingly for emphasis
- Avoid all caps for body text (hard to read)
- ALL CAPS acceptable for short headlines/labels
- Maintain contrast between text and background (4.5:1 minimum)
Story Structure
Every effective infographic tells a story with three parts:
1. Introduction (Hook)
Purpose: Grab attention, establish topic
Elements:
- Compelling headline
- Eye-catching hero visual
- Key statistic or question
- Topic introduction
Best Practices:
- Make it impossible to ignore
- Promise value ("Learn how to...")
- Create curiosity
- 10-15% of total space
2. Body (Content)
Purpose: Deliver the main information
Elements:
- Data and statistics
- Step-by-step content
- Comparisons and analysis
- Supporting visuals
Best Practices:
- Logical flow (chronological, importance, or categorical)
- Clear section breaks
- Balance visuals and text
- 70-80% of total space
3. Conclusion (Takeaway)
Purpose: Summarize, call to action
Elements:
- Key takeaway or summary
- Call to action
- Source citations
- Branding/attribution
Best Practices:
- Reinforce main message
- Clear next step for viewer
- Don't introduce new information
- 10-15% of total space
Alignment and Grids
Grid Systems
Use invisible grids to align elements consistently:
Column Grid (Most Common)
- 2, 3, 4, or 6 columns
- Elements span one or more columns
- Gutters (gaps) between columns
- Creates orderly, professional look
Modular Grid
- Columns + rows = modules
- More flexibility for varied content
- Good for complex layouts
- Dashboard-style designs
Alignment Types
Left Alignment
- Most common for text
- Creates strong left edge
- Easy to scan
- Professional appearance
Center Alignment
- Good for headlines
- Creates symmetry
- Use sparingly for text
- Works for single elements
Right Alignment
- Rarely used for primary content
- Good for numbers in tables
- Can feel unusual in Western design
- Use intentionally
Alignment Best Practices
- Pick one primary alignment and stick to it
- Align related elements to the same edge or center
- Use invisible grid lines for consistency
- Avoid random placement—everything should align to something
- Create visual connections through alignment
Color Usage
Color Functions in Infographics
- Establish hierarchy: Bright colors for important items
- Group related items: Same color = same category
- Create contrast: Distinguish between elements
- Evoke emotions: Colors carry psychological meaning
- Reinforce brand: Consistent with brand identity
Color Distribution
60-30-10 Rule:
- 60% Dominant color (background, large areas)
- 30% Secondary color (supporting elements)
- 10% Accent color (highlights, CTAs)
Color Psychology
| Color | Association | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Blue | Trust, professionalism, calm | Corporate, tech, healthcare |
| Green | Growth, nature, money | Environmental, finance, health |
| Red | Urgency, energy, passion | Alerts, sales, food |
| Orange | Friendly, confident, creative | CTAs, youth brands |
| Yellow | Optimism, caution, attention | Highlights, warnings |
| Purple | Luxury, creativity, wisdom | Premium brands, education |
| Black | Sophistication, power, elegance | Luxury, formal |
| White | Clean, simple, space | Backgrounds, breathing room |
Contrast Requirements
For accessibility (WCAG 2.1 AA):
- Normal text: 4.5:1 contrast ratio minimum
- Large text (18pt+): 3:1 contrast ratio minimum
- Graphics and UI: 3:1 contrast ratio minimum
Tools to check contrast:
- WebAIM Contrast Checker
- Coolors Contrast Checker
- Adobe Color Accessibility Tools
Icon Usage
Icon Styles
Line Icons (Outline)
- Clean, modern look
- Work well at small sizes
- Best for minimal designs
- Consistent line weight important
Filled Icons (Solid)
- Bolder visual impact
- Good for quick recognition
- Work well as focal points
- More accessible at small sizes
Illustrated Icons
- More personality and uniqueness
- Higher visual weight
- Best for playful designs
- May not scale well
Icon Best Practices
- Use one style consistently throughout the infographic
- Ensure recognizability—icons should be immediately understood
- Maintain consistent size for icons at the same hierarchy level
- Add labels when icon meaning isn't 100% clear
- Match visual weight of icons to surrounding elements
- Consider color carefully—single color often cleaner
- Avoid icon overload—not everything needs an icon
Icon Size Guidelines
| Context | Recommended Size |
|---|---|
| Hero/Feature icon | 64-128px |
| Section icon | 32-48px |
| List item icon | 24-32px |
| Inline icon | 16-24px |
Data Visualization Best Practices
Choosing Chart Types
| Data Type | Best Chart |
|---|---|
| Comparison (few items) | Bar chart |
| Comparison (many items) | Horizontal bar |
| Parts of a whole | Pie/donut chart |
| Trend over time | Line chart |
| Distribution | Histogram |
| Relationship | Scatter plot |
| Geographic | Map/choropleth |
| Hierarchy | Treemap |
| Flow/process | Sankey diagram |
Chart Best Practices
- Label everything: Axes, data points, legends
- Start Y-axis at zero for bar charts (avoid misleading)
- Limit pie slices to 5-7 maximum
- Use consistent colors for same categories across charts
- Remove chart junk: No 3D effects, minimal gridlines
- Highlight key data: Use color to emphasize important points
Number Presentation
- Large numbers: Use abbreviations (1.2M, not 1,200,000)
- Percentages: Include % symbol, one decimal max
- Comparisons: Use consistent units and precision
- Context: Always provide reference points ("2x industry average")
Accessibility Considerations
Visual Accessibility
-
Color alone shouldn't convey meaning
- Add patterns, labels, or shapes
- Works for colorblind users
-
Sufficient contrast
- 4.5:1 for normal text
- 3:1 for large text and graphics
-
Text size
- Minimum 1