Zero signup. Zero credits.
Type a brand brief, get a logo. No email, no account, no paywall. The tool is the page.
Create a clean, bold badge logo — text and icon enclosed in a strong shape. Describe your brand and the badge styling is applied for you.
Type a brand brief, get a logo. No email, no account, no paywall. The tool is the page.
Most logos finish in well under ten seconds. No waiting room, no queue, no upsell.
The output is yours. No watermark, no licensing wall, no upgrade-to-remove friction.
Square for icons and avatars, landscape for lockups, vertical for badges and stories.
No NSFW, ever. Safe for school, work, public computers, and kids around.
No premium tier, no Pro plan. Rate-limited per hour per IP just to keep the lights on.
Type your brand name, industry, and mood. Mention a badge shape if you prefer one — circular, rectangular, hexagonal, shield, or arched.
1:1 is ideal for most badge logos since they are compact and self-contained. 16:9 works for wide banner badges with extended text.
One click to generate your badge. If the shape or layout is not quite right, tweak your prompt and regenerate. Every download is free with no watermark.
A badge logo encloses the brand name and an optional icon inside a defined shape — a circle, rounded rectangle, hexagon, or shield. Badges feel structured and confident without the ornamental complexity of full emblem logos. They are widely used in outdoor brands, food and beverage labels, gyms, barbershops, and retail.
This page biases the AI model toward bold badge compositions with thick borders and clean typography on a white background. You supply the brand details; the model builds the badge layout.
Badge logos are a strong choice for: outdoor and adventure brands, food and beverage companies, barbershops and salons, fitness centers, retail shops, and any brand that wants a structured but approachable mark.
The difference between a badge and an emblem: badges are simpler. They use clean shapes and bold text without the intricate ornamental detail of a full crest or seal. If you want something more decorative, try the emblem maker. If you want clean and bold, this is the right page.
Tips for prompting: specify the badge shape (circular, rectangular, hexagonal) and mention whether you want an icon included. Keep the text short — one or two words plus a tagline works best inside a badge. Mention the dominant color for the clearest results.
Completely free — no watermark, no signup, no limits beyond a per-hour rate cap that keeps the service running smoothly.
A badge is simpler — clean shapes, bold text, thick borders. An emblem adds ornamental detail like laurel wreaths, filigree, and intricate crests. Both enclose the design, but badges are more modern and minimal.
You can mention any shape — circular, oval, rounded rectangle, hexagon, shield, or arched. The model will follow your cue. If you do not specify, it defaults to a common badge shape.
Yes — describe the icon in your prompt alongside the brand name. A mountain, coffee cup, dumbbell, or any simple symbol works well inside a badge composition.
The model is steered toward clean, bold typography for readability. Keep your brand name short — one or two words produce the cleanest badge text. Longer names may lose legibility.