Free Icons for WordPress
Use IconVaultKit's 200,000 plus free SVG icons in your WordPress project.
WordPress powers over 40% of the web, making it one of the most competitive platforms for designers and developers alike. Whether you are building a custom theme, a WooCommerce storefront, or a client site with Elementor, visual consistency matters. Icons are a core part of that consistency. They guide users, reinforce navigation, and add polish to interfaces without adding bulk. Free SVG icons from IconVaultKit solve a real problem: they scale perfectly on any screen, stay crisp on retina displays, and cost nothing. With 200,000 plus icons available in both fill and outline variants, WordPress developers can match any brand style without hunting across multiple libraries or paying licensing fees.
Install IconVaultKit for WordPress
Download SVG/PNG
Why WordPress Developers Use IconVaultKit
IconVaultKit icons fit naturally across every layer of a WordPress project. Use them in custom navigation menus to replace text labels with recognizable symbols. Drop them into WooCommerce product cards, checkout pages, and trust badges to guide shoppers visually. Enhance admin dashboards and custom plugin interfaces with clear, consistent iconography. Add icons to Gutenberg blocks, widget areas, footer columns, and call-to-action buttons. Whether you are building a membership site, a blog, or a business landing page, IconVaultKit provides the right icon for every component without requiring a paid account or attribution.
What You Get
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Icon count | 200,000 plus icons across 92+ libraries |
| Formats | SVG, PNG, JSX, Base64. Copy to clipboard or download instantly. |
| Styles | Fill and Outline variants for every icon |
| Customisation | Color, size, rotation, flip. All in-browser. |
| Licence | 100% free, no attribution required |
| Account | No account or signup needed |
| Framework support | WordPress, SVG copy/paste |
WordPress Tip
When adding SVG icons in WordPress, use the wp_enqueue_style function to load a shared SVG sprite sheet from your theme's assets folder, rather than embedding inline SVGs on every page call. This approach reduces markup bloat and improves page load time. Always include aria-label or aria-hidden attributes on your icon elements to meet WCAG accessibility standards. For PNG fallbacks, load them conditionally using WordPress conditional tags, keeping your theme lightweight across all browsers and devices.
Start Using Free Icons in WordPress
Download free WordPress icons from IconVaultKit and build better sites today.