A construction company’s logo shows up everywhere. Truck doors, hard hats, yard signs, invoices, your website header. That’s a lot of surfaces, and they’re all doing quiet work to tell people whether your business looks trustworthy before you’ve said a word.
Good construction logos tend to do a few things well. They read clearly at small sizes. They work in one color when needed. And they say something specific about what you actually do, whether that’s residential builds, commercial projects, or something greener and more specialized.
Here are some logos from the shop worth looking at if you’re in construction, trades, or anything related to the built environment.
Logos worth a look
The Urban Construction Logo is the most direct option here. It reads immediately as construction and works well on both digital and print materials like site signage or vehicle wraps.
The Traffic Cone Circle Logo is a smart pick for contractors who want something a little more distinctive. The circular badge format keeps it compact and it scales down cleanly to a favicon or embroidered patch.
The Triangle Mountain and Wrench Logo combines a landscape element with a tool motif, which works well for companies that do outdoor or infrastructure work. It has that rugged utility feel without being overdone.
If your company has a sustainability angle, the Gear Leaf Drop Logo threads the needle between industrial and environmental. Good for green builders, solar contractors, or anyone positioning around responsible construction.
The Cityscape Logo suits commercial contractors or developers. The skyline silhouette reads as scale and ambition without needing any text to do the heavy lifting.
The Geometric Innovation Ribbon Logo is a looser, more abstract direction. It’s worth considering if you want something that doesn’t immediately scream “construction” but still feels structural and considered. Architecture firms and design-build companies tend to go this route.
The Intertwined Hands with Lines Logo could work well for partnership-based firms or joint ventures. It communicates collaboration in a way that’s visual without being literal.
The Star Brush Emblem leans toward finishing trades, painting contractors, or restoration companies. It’s a bit more detailed, so it works best on larger surfaces or digital contexts rather than tiny embroidery.
And if you want something that breaks from the typical construction palette, the Swan Silhouette Logo with Leaves is an unusual choice. It’s not an obvious construction logo, which is exactly why some boutique builders or luxury renovation companies reach for something like it. It signals a different tier of service.
Editing your logo in Figma
All of these logos come as SVG files, which means you can open them directly in Figma and start adjusting without any quality loss. Here are a few practical things to do once you’ve got the file open:
- Change the color first. Drop in your brand color or try a few options before touching anything else. Color alone can dramatically shift how a logo reads.
- Check it at small sizes. Paste it into a 32x32 frame and a 100x100 frame. If it gets muddy, look at simplifying the details or removing secondary elements.
- Swap the font if there’s text. Most of these logos include editable text layers. Match it to whatever typeface you’re already using, or try something heavier if you want more presence on signage.
Browse more options
There’s a full set of construction and trades logos at /collections/construction-logos if none of these quite fit. New options get added regularly, and every file comes as a ready-to-edit SVG.