In an age where brand identity must balance familiarity with digital relevance, several iconic companies are opting for subtle logo updates over sweeping rebrands. The trend is gaining momentum as brands seek to modernise while avoiding public backlash in a sensitive economic climate.
Recent low-key changes from global players like Google and Walmart prove that even the most modest tweak can refresh a company’s visual language. Below, we break down five rebrands so understated, you may have missed them.
1. Google’s Gradient-Enhanced “G”
This week, Google quietly rolled out a refresh of its widely recognised “G” logo across iOS and Android apps. The updated icon swaps its traditional block colours for a smooth gradient finish, signalling a shift towards more refined and responsive visuals.

It marks the first change to the circular “G” since its debut nearly a decade ago, when it replaced the company’s all-blue lowercase “g”.
2. Walmart’s Wordmark Goes Digital
By JKR
Branding agency JKR gave the Walmart logo a modern boost earlier this year by scaling up its yellow “spark” icon and wordmark. The update introduces rounded characters and enhanced colour vibrancy, aimed at creating a softer and more digitally friendly brand presence.

The change is subtle but positions Walmart’s identity squarely in the era of e-commerce and app-based retail.
3. Amazon’s Smile Gets More Empathetic
By Koto and Amazon XCM
Following an 18-month collaboration with design agency Koto, Amazon unveiled its refined logo in May 2025.

The centrepiece of the update? A more expressive smile with a longer shaft and sharper point, painted in a new, saturated custom hue named Smile Orange. The aim: greater emotional resonance and clearer visual language across devices.
4. IKEA’s First Logo Update Since 1983
By Seventy Agency
In its first redesign in over 40 years, Swedish homeware giant IKEA partnered with Seventy Agency to make its blue wordmark slightly larger within the iconic yellow oval.

The update also relocates the trademark symbol into the oval and shifts the logo’s blue to a more muted tone for improved print and digital reproduction. The changes ensure continuity while streamlining for modern use cases.
5. Herman Miller Returns to Modernist Roots
By Order
Furniture brand Herman Miller has shed the red circle around its swooping “M” symbol in favour of a freestanding design.

The New York-based studio Order also restored a Helvetica-style typeface, echoing the brand’s modernist 1968 aesthetic. The move is part of a broader shift back to timeless, uncluttered design sensibilities.

