Handyman Logo Ideas

When someone calls a handyman, they want to know two things fast: can you do the job, and are you someone they can trust in their home? Your logo does that job before you even pick up the phone. It shows up on your van, your invoices, your business cards, your Google listing. A good one is clear, recognizable at small sizes, and gives people a sense of what you actually do.

For a handyman business, that usually means leaning into tools or motion. Abstract shapes can work, but something that hints at the trade tends to land better with homeowners who are scanning a few options quickly. You don’t need a complicated crest or a pile of every tool you own. One strong image, readable at 32px and at 320px, is the goal.

Color matters too. Blues and grays read as reliable. Oranges and yellows signal energy and visibility, which is why you see them on safety gear. Black and white is always an option if you want something that works on any background without thinking about it.

Logos we love

The Tech Gear Icon is a clean gear mark that works across trades. It reads as mechanical and competent without being tied to one specific service, so it holds up whether you’re doing drywall or installing a ceiling fan.

If precision is part of your pitch, the Tape Measure Circle Icon is a strong pick. The circular format makes it easy to use as a favicon or profile photo, and the tape measure is one of those tools everyone recognizes immediately.

The Pliers on Document Logo combines a tool with a document shape, which works nicely for handymen who also do estimates, contracts, or any kind of service paperwork. It suggests both the trade and the professional side of running a business.

For anyone who does painting or finishing work, the Paintbrush Circle Logo is a circular icon that keeps things simple. It’s a good fit if painting is your main service, or even if it’s just a big part of what you offer.

The Wavy Briefcase Logo takes a more business-forward angle. The briefcase shape signals professionalism, and the wavy styling gives it some personality. This one works well if you want your brand to feel a bit more polished or if you serve commercial clients.

The Power Drill Icon is exactly what it sounds like. A drill is one of the most universally understood handyman tools, and this icon is clean enough to use anywhere from a yard sign to a social media header.

Editing your logo in Figma

All of these logos are SVG files, which means you can open them in Figma and change colors, swap out text, or resize them without any quality loss. Here are a few practical things to do once you’ve got the file open:

  • Change the color first. Pick one brand color and swap the main shape to match. Most of these icons are built in one or two colors, so it’s a quick change.
  • Add your business name. Drop in a text layer with your name. Use a sans-serif font for the text to keep things readable. Something like Inter, DM Sans, or Poppins pairs well with tool-style icons.
  • Test it small. Shrink your design down to about 32x32 pixels and see if it still reads clearly. If it turns into a blob, simplify it. Remove thin lines or small details that disappear at small sizes.
Once you’re happy with it, export the SVG for web use and a PNG at 2x or 3x resolution for print. That covers most situations you’ll run into.

Browse all handyman logos

If none of these are quite right, there are more options in the full collection. Head over to /collections/handyman-logos to see everything. You can filter by style or color and find something that matches where you want to take the business.

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