All categories
Every icon in the IconDrop archive belongs to one or more of the categories below. Categories are organized around the things product teams actually build — interface chrome, branded affordances, status signals, and onboarding illustration.
Brand marks for the languages developers ship in production.
The IDEs, version-control hosts, and CI tools that run on every laptop.
Cloud providers, orchestrators, CDNs, and the runtime that ships your bytes.
iOS, Android, Flutter, React Native, and the mobile SDK ecosystem.
Front-end frameworks, design systems, and CSS toolkits.
SaaS, fintech, social, and the brand marks every integration page needs.
Operating systems, distros, and the browsers your users live in.
How categories work on IconDrop
Categories are the broadest organizing principle on IconDrop. Every icon in the archive is assigned to at least one category and often to several, so a single visual can show up in both a topical bucket (such as Mobile & Devices) and a use-case bucket (such as Status & Indicators). This dual classification mirrors how designers actually search: sometimes you know what the icon depicts, sometimes you know how you plan to use it.
If you are building a complete interface — say, the navigation rail of a SaaS product — start in a topical category, pull a baseline set, then jump into the related collections to round out coverage. If you are searching for a single missing affordance, the tags index is usually faster.