A site’s favicon is usually stored in one of a few predictable places, but it isn’t always straightforward. Here’s how you can grab it:
1. Check the site’s HTML
-
Open the website in your browser.
-
Right-click → View Page Source (or
Ctrl+U). -
Search (
Ctrl+F) for<link rel="icon"or<link rel="shortcut icon">. -
Example:
<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon"> -
Copy the
hrefvalue, open it in your browser, and save it (Right-click → Save As).
2. Default location guess
Most sites still place their favicon at:
https://example.com/favicon.ico
Try appending /favicon.ico to the site’s root URL. If it loads, save it.
3. Browser developer tools
-
Open the site in Chrome/Firefox.
-
Press
F12to open DevTools. -
Go to the Network tab, refresh the page.
-
Filter by “Img” or “Other”. Look for
.ico,.png, or.svg. -
Right-click → Open in new tab → Save.
4. Specialized services
You can query Google’s favicon service directly:
https://www.google.com/s2/favicons?sz=64&domain=example.com
Replace example.com with the site’s domain. This returns the favicon in .png.
5. Command-line (if you prefer)
With wget or curl:
wget https://example.com/favicon.ico -O favicon.ico
Do you want me to show you a one-liner script (e.g., in Python or Bash) that automatically downloads a site’s favicon, without needing to manually check?
