Email Signature Examples with Logo

Here are 10+ email signature examples showing different approaches to logo placement — what works, why it works, and how to replicate it. Each example describes a real-world use case.

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The main logo placement options, and when to use each

Before the examples, here's a quick reference for the common logo layouts. Each has a use case where it performs best.

Logo left, text right
Best for: Corporate, B2B, agencies

Most common layout. Clean two-column structure. Logo provides brand recognition on the first scan; text provides contact details. Works well in every email client.

Headshot left, text right
Best for: Real estate, consulting, sales, personal brands

The personal version of the logo-left layout. Puts a face to the name before a first meeting. Higher trust signal in relationship-driven industries.

Logo centered above name
Best for: Professional services, formal contexts

More formal, symmetrical layout. Logo commands attention as the first element. Works well when the logo is square or near-square.

Logo right, text left
Best for: Minimal designs, brands with right-aligned logos

Less common but works well when the text content is brief (name + title only). Can feel slightly unbalanced if there are many contact details.

Headshot + logo combination
Best for: Real estate teams, franchise agents, financial advisors

Personal headshot + company/brokerage logo in the same signature. Headshot on the left, logo smaller on the right (or below). Communicates both individual identity and brand affiliation.

Small icon / wordmark in minimal signature
Best for: Tech, startups, developers

A very small logo or styled wordmark (the company name as a graphic) used without a full logo image. Keeps the signature extremely clean. Works when the brand is recognizable by name.

10+ email signature examples with logos

01

Corporate — logo left, text right

LOGO
Sarah Chen
VP of Marketing | Fieldstone Inc.
D: +1 (212) 555-0134
fieldstone.com | LinkedIn
What makes it work: The two-column structure is the most tested layout in email clients. The logo (left) provides instant brand context. The divider line between logo and text gives visual separation without taking up space. This format holds up in every major email client including classic Outlook. Good for any corporate use case. See the full business signature guide for rollout advice.
02

Real estate agent — circular headshot

Photo
James Ortega
Realtor® | Compass Beverly Hills
CalDRE #01234567
M: +1 (310) 555-0187
📅 Book a home tour →
What makes it work: The circular crop on the headshot is a subtle design choice that feels personal rather than corporate. In real estate, clients are buying from a person — the face on the left communicates that before anything else. The Calendly link removes scheduling friction for property tours. The license number (required by California law) is placed below the brokerage, not at the top. Full real estate signature guide here.
03

Agency / creative studio — logo above name

STUDIO LOGO
Marcus Webb
Creative Director | Webb Studio
webbstudio.co | Dribbble | LinkedIn
What makes it work: The centered stacked layout gives the logo visual prominence without making it dominate. Good choice when the studio brand is the primary identity (rather than the individual). The centered layout is symmetrical and formal — appropriate for creative agencies sending proposals to clients. Keep the logo under 200px wide in this format.
04

Financial advisor — headshot + firm logo combo

Photo
Yuki Tanaka, CFP®
Senior Financial Advisor
M: +1 (312) 555-0194 | D: +1 (312) 555-0100
tanakaadvisory.com | SEC Reg # 12345678
Firm logo
What makes it work: Financial services benefit from both personal trust (headshot, CFP® designation) and institutional credibility (firm logo). The firm logo on the right is smaller than the headshot, keeping the personal identity primary. The SEC registration number satisfies regulatory disclosure requirements. Two phone numbers make sense here — clients in different contexts (office hours vs. urgent calls) need different numbers.
05

Tech startup — minimal with small wordmark

Dev Patel
Head of Engineering
lumio| lumio.io | github.com/devpatel
What makes it work: When the company brand is a simple wordmark rather than a graphic logo, you can represent it inline with a small colored dot or icon — keeping the signature very lean. This works best for startups and tech companies where the recipient audience understands and appreciates minimalism. GitHub is more relevant than a phone number for a head of engineering emailing developers or investors.
06

Law firm — logo + mandatory disclaimer

LAW FIRM
Elena Vasquez
Associate Attorney | Bar #CA123456
T: +1 (212) 555-0167 | evasquez@vasquezlaw.com

This communication is confidential and may be legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately...

What makes it work: Law firm signatures need to balance professionalism with the legal disclaimer requirement. The disclaimer is separated visually by a divider line and uses a smaller, italic font — present but not dominating. The firm logo is dark (navy or black is common in legal branding). The Bar number is present without being overly prominent. See the professional signature guide for more legal industry examples.
07

Small business owner — logo + CTA banner

LOGO
Ana Rodriguez
Owner | Bright Bloom Florist
T: +1 (503) 555-0112
brightbloompdx.com | Instagram
🌷 Spring arrangements now booking — order before April 15 →
What makes it work: For a small business with seasonal demand, the promotional banner is doing real work. Every email sent during the busy spring season mentions the seasonal offer. Instagram is the right social link for a florist — it's where their portfolio lives. The square logo at 70×70px is the right size for a standalone business brand. See the full small business guide.
08

Freelance designer — portfolio-forward

Photo
Priya Nair
Brand Designer | priya.design
Behance | LinkedIn
Currently: rebrand for Acme Corp →
What makes it work: The portfolio link (priya.design as the domain itself is the brand) is displayed as the primary identity below her name — not a secondary link. Behance is the right platform for a brand designer. The "currently working on" line provides social proof without being braggy — it signals active, in-demand work. More freelance signature advice here.
09

Executive — logo only, no headshot

ARCHWAY
Jordan Rivera
CEO
archway.io
What makes it work: The simplest effective layout. Logo on the left asserts brand identity. CEO title needs no explanation. Website link is sufficient — the brevity of this signature is itself a statement. No phone number, no social links, no CTA. This only works because the title provides sufficient authority context; a more junior role would need more information. The logo here is dark (black or navy wordmark), clean, at 150×40px.
10

Healthcare / medical practice — compliant and clean

Photo
Dr. Michael Torres, MD
Cardiologist | Westside Heart Center
Office: +1 (310) 555-0188 | Fax: +1 (310) 555-0189
westsideheart.com

This email may contain protected health information (PHI) covered by HIPAA privacy regulations...

What makes it work: Medical signatures have regulatory requirements (HIPAA disclosure) that must appear. A fax number is still operationally important in healthcare — including it is correct here. The headshot is appropriate for a patient-facing role. The credential (MD, Cardiologist) is the most relevant identifier after the name. The HIPAA notice is smaller, separated visually, and doesn't crowd the main content.
11

Nonprofit — mission-forward

ORG
Sofia Park
Program Director | Bright Future Foundation
T: +1 (206) 555-0145
brightfuture.org | LinkedIn
💚 Our 2025 Annual Report is live — see the impact →
What makes it work: Nonprofits can use the banner space effectively for impact communication — a link to the annual report, a current campaign, or a donation page. The green color scheme is aligned with the org's environmental mission. The banner at the bottom doesn't feel salesy — it feels informational, which matches the tone of a nonprofit communication.

Quick reference: logo sizing for email signatures

LayoutDisplay sizeUpload at (for retina)Max file size
Inline with text (two-column)120–150px wide240–300px wide60KB
Centered above/below text160–200px wide320–400px wide80KB
Square logo (like an avatar)60–80px each side120–160px each side40KB
Headshot (circular or square)70–90px each side140–180px each side50KB
Promotional banner (full width)600px wide1200px wide120KB

For the full guide on adding logos to signatures — including file formats, hosting, and the HTML attributes that keep images sharp — see the email signature with logo guide.

Related guides

Frequently asked questions

Where should I put my logo in an email signature — left or right?

Left alignment is the most common and tends to read most naturally, because Western readers scan left-to-right. A logo in the left column with name and contact details to the right is a layout that works well in nearly every email client and across screen sizes. Right-aligned logos work too, but they can feel slightly unbalanced. Center-aligned logos (often stacked above the name and details) work well for personal brands or when you want a formal, symmetrical look.

How big should a logo be in an email signature?

For a logo displayed inline with text (side by side in a two-column layout), 120–150px wide is the sweet spot. For a standalone logo row (centered above or below the main content), you can go up to 200px wide. Upload the image at 2× the intended display size for retina sharpness, then constrain with HTML width and height attributes. Keep the file size under 80KB regardless of dimensions.

Should I use a headshot or a company logo?

Use a headshot if your work involves direct personal relationships — real estate, consulting, sales, coaching, financial advising. The signature represents you as a person. Use a company logo if you're representing a brand rather than an individual — when the company identity matters more than your face. Some contexts work well with both: a headshot on the left and a small company logo on the right, or a headshot with the company name styled as a logo treatment in text.

What file format should I use for my email signature logo?

PNG with a transparent background is best for logos. Transparency means the logo works on both white and dark email backgrounds. Use JPG only for photos (headshots, banner images) where file size matters. Avoid SVG in email signatures — most email clients don't render SVG. GIF works for static images but offers worse quality than PNG at the same file size.

Can I have both a headshot and a logo in the same email signature?

Yes, and it's a common setup for real estate agents, consultants, and small business owners who want both personal recognition and brand presence. The key is proportion: keep both images small enough that they don't dominate the layout. A headshot at 70×70px and a logo at 100px wide side by side is a balanced combination. Larger than that and the signature starts to look like a flyer.

Why does my logo appear blurry in my email signature?

Usually because you uploaded a small image and it's being displayed at a larger size, or because you uploaded a large image without specifying exact dimensions and some email clients are scaling it incorrectly. Fix: upload your logo at exactly 2× the intended display size (e.g., 300px wide for a 150px display), then add width='150' and height attributes to the <img> tag. This keeps it sharp on retina screens without scaling artifacts.

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