Where can I download a high-quality Cash App logo PNG file?

I’m working on a small personal project and need an official, high-resolution Cash App logo in PNG format with a transparent background. I’ve tried searching online but keep finding low-quality or outdated versions, and I’m worried about using something that isn’t authorized. Can anyone point me to a trusted source or official brand assets page where I can safely download the correct Cash App logo PNG?

Easiest reliable options:

  1. Official Cash App brand page
    Search:
    cash app brand resources
    or
    square cash app press kit

They host SVG and PNG logos. Usually you get:
• Green icon with white dollar sign
• Sometimes black or white versions
• Transparent backgrounds
• High resolution, good for print and screen

  1. Press / media kit
    Search:
    cash app media kit logo png
    Look for a zip file from an official Cash App or Square domain. Avoid random logo sites. Those often have outdated icons or compressed PNGs.

  2. Convert SVG to PNG yourself
    If you get SVG from their brand page:
    • Open it in Figma, Sketch, Photopea, or Inkscape
    • Export as PNG
    • Choose 1024x1024 or higher
    • Keep transparent background checked

That gives you a crisp, scalable logo for your personal project.

  1. Check usage rules
    Their brand page lists basic rules.
    Common ones:
    • Do not change colors
    • Do not stretch or distort
    • Keep minimum padding around the logo

For a personal project not used commercially, you are usually fine if you keep it faithful and do not imply you work for them.

Avoid:
• Pinterest logo pins
• Random “logo PNG” sites with watermarks
• Tiny 128x128 icons from app stores

Those look bad when you scale them and often use old design.

If search results look messy, try this exact query:
“Cash App logo svg site:cash.app”
or
“Cash App logo png site:squareup.com”

Stick to domains like:
cash.app
squareup.com
squarecdn.com

Those come from the source and give you the newest version.

If you keep hitting trashy logo sites and Pinterest JPGs, you’re not crazy, search results for this are a mess.

Couple options that aren’t just repeating what @chasseurdetoiles already said:

  1. Use the app store listing, but properly
    The Cash App icon in the Apple App Store and Google Play is technically high-res, but what most people do wrong is just right‑clicking the tiny preview.
    Instead:

    • On desktop, open the app’s page.
    • Inspect the icon image (right‑click → Inspect).
    • Grab the direct URL to the largest image size (usually a 1024×1024 PNG).
    • Save that and drop it into something like Photopea or Figma.
    • If it comes with rounded corners or a background, use a quick mask / magic wand to clean it up and keep transparency.
      This is not as “pure” as pulling from the brand kit, but for a personal project it’s usually visually identical to the real icon.
  2. Use a vector logo site as a “pointer,” not as the final file
    Some vector sites actually link to the official source or at least show the current style. If you search “Cash App logo vector” you can:

    • Compare the icon you see to the one in your app on your phone.
    • If it matches, use that as a visual reference to confirm you’ve got the right, current logo from an official domain elsewhere.
      I wouldn’t download or trust their PNGs directly. A lot of them are recompressed and slightly off-color.
  3. Check design system / UI kit repos
    Designers sometimes bundle official logos into UI kits:

    • Search: “Cash App” figma community
    • Look for payment / fintech UI kits that list Cash App among PayPal, Venmo, etc.
    • Grab the Cash App icon layer and export to PNG at whatever resolution you want.
      These are often pulled from the official SVGs and kept clean. Just double-check it’s not some ancient pre‑rebrand version.
  4. Quick sanity checks so you don’t grab an outdated one
    Before you commit to a PNG, compare it to the live icon on your phone:

    • Same shade of green? A lot of old ones are way too bright or too dark.
    • Edges sharp at 200% zoom? Blurry edges = someone upscaled a tiny asset.
    • Background actually transparent? Open it over a checkerboard in your editor and make sure there isn’t a white box.
  5. Tiny legal reality check
    Even for a personal project, it’s worth not doing stuff like:

    • Editing the colors to match your theme
    • Slapping it into a fake “sponsored by Cash App” banner
    • Mashing it into some meme that’d make their lawyers cry
      If you’re just displaying it accurately as “here’s a payment option” or part of a mockup, that’s normally how people use it without trouble.

So: I’d start with a clean 1024×1024 icon from the App Store / Play Store, verify it visually, and only fall back to brand kits or UI kits if you need multiple color variants. And yeah, avoid all those “free PNG logo” sites, they’re like the fast food of branding assets: technically food, but you’ll regret zooming in.

Best place most people overlook: design tool ecosystems.

If you have access to Figma, Adobe XD, or Sketch, search their community libraries for “Cash App payment icons” or “fintech payments pack.” A lot of these UI kits quietly embed the official Cash App SVG, kept current because designers hate outdated assets even more than you do.

How to leverage that:

  1. Open the community / plugin library in your tool.
  2. Grab a reputable payments / fintech UI kit that includes Cash App alongside PayPal, Venmo, etc.
  3. Copy just the Cash App icon into your file.
  4. Export as PNG at whatever size you want (1024 or higher, transparent background).

Pros:

  • Often vector, so you control resolution.
  • Usually color accurate and on-brand.
  • Easy to test variants on dark/light backgrounds.

Cons:

  • Quality depends on the kit author.
  • Some kits are slightly old, so compare against the current app icon on your phone.

I’m actually less enthusiastic than @sonhadordobosque about scraping the app store icon. Those assets are great quality, but you sometimes get baked-in corner radiuses or subtle compression artifacts. Fine for quick mockups, not ideal if you are picky about “official” look.

Compared to @chasseurdetoiles’ brand-page approach, design-system kits are more convenient if you are already in a design workflow and want to avoid digging through corporate press sections.

Since you mentioned a “small personal project,” I would:

  • Use a community UI kit vector, verify visually against the live Cash App icon.
  • Export a large transparent PNG.
  • Keep their green and spacing intact so you are on the safe side branding‑wise.

That workflow gives you a clean, high-res PNG without chasing sketchy “free logo PNG” sites, and it stays close to how actual product designers work with brand assets.