Over the past few months, you'll have noticed our new brand identity showing up - we redesigned stackoverflow.co, refreshed the blog, and updated our social profiles. Our new font is also free to use and has been used on 4,500 websites. It’s great to see how versatile it is.
Next week we will share a first look at a new beta experience for Stack Overflow. Among the changes, you'll find a new ‘Communities’ section in the sidebar that brings all the sites you're a member of together in one place, making it easier to move between them.
This step toward a more unified experience is also the moment we will formally retire the old Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange logos, replacing them with the new logo we developed with your input last year. There is some nuance to this however: if your SE network site has a custom logo (not just the SE logo), we are not replacing it. We are adding the new logo above, not replacing the custom logos.
You can see in this graphic how this will play out across the various touchpoints:
One of the driving questions behind this work was simple: “When someone lands on one of our sites for the first time, do they understand what they're looking at?” Too often, the answer was “no”. The relationship between Stack Overflow, Stack Exchange, the broader network, and our business products was confusing — even for people who'd been here a while. So we made the decision to bring everything under the Stack Overflow name, reflecting what had already become true in how most of the world refers to us (and ourselves, going back a long time).
We know that for many of you, the Stack Exchange name carries real meaning and that nuance between what is SO vs. SE was already clear to you, having seen it evolve. This isn't about diminishing the communities that built this network — it's about making them more visible and more accessible under a name that people already recognize. After all, that’s how Stack Exchange came to be, with Stack Overflow as the gateway to places for more detailed discussions, hobbies and non-technical topics. As co-founder Joel Spolsky once said:
But you know how programmers are. They “have babies.” Or “take pictures of babies.” So our users started building Stack Exchange sites on unrelated topics, like parenting and photography, [...]
We'll start working through the practical implications of unifying the experience — some of which you've already helpfully raised — including domains, naming, themes, and other specifics. We'll share more as those plans take shape. For our Stack Exchange sites, the logo addition shown above will be the only Stack Overflow beta change the sites will see in 2026.
For those that want to dig further into our design elements, you can find our new guidelines and assets here. If you have ideas for where you'd like to see the new identity used - merch, community pages, profile elements - we're genuinely interested, so share them below.















