Last updated: May 2026
A brand refresh updates the surface (logo variations, colour palette, typography, etc) without changing what the brand fundamentally stands for. But a full rebrand questions the core (positioning, audience, etc) and the real reason the brand exists. Choosing between them isn't about budget — it's about whether the brand's underlying foundation is still accurate.
If your brand strategy is sound but your visual identity feels dated, that's a refresh. If the market has moved, your company has pivoted, or your positioning no longer reflects reality, that's a rebrand. Along with the need-to-knows, here's a clear decision framework for figuring out which one you actually need.
At a glance — brand refresh vs. full rebrand:
A brand refresh updates the look and feel of your brand without changing its strategic foundation. It's the right move when your brand's positioning, values, and audience definition are still sound — but your visual expression has started to feel out of step with the market.
A brand refresh typically covers:
One thing worth saying directly: if you're bored of your brand, that's probably because you look at it every single day. Your customers don't. A brand that feels stale to the people inside the business often still reads as consistent and familiar to the people outside it. Before investing in a refresh, make sure the feeling of staleness is grounded in actual evidence — customer feedback, research, conversion data — not just internal fatigue.
A full rebrand goes to the strategic foundation of the brand. It isn't primarily a visual exercise — it starts with the questions behind the visual ones:
A rebrand is the right response when the answers to those questions have changed in a meaningful way.
A full rebrand typically covers:
When a client comes to us asking about rebranding, the first question we ask isn't about scope — it's about whether the brand's underlying positioning is still accurate. That diagnostic step is the most important one in the whole process, and it's the one that gets skipped when organizations rush to visual deliverables before strategic clarity is established.
| Factor | Brand Refresh | Full Rebrand |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Visual updates only | Strategy + visual + verbal identity |
| Brand strategy | Unchanged — still accurate | Redefined from the ground up |
| Positioning | Preserved | Reconsidered and updated |
| Typical timeline | 6–8 weeks | 12–16 weeks |
| Investment range | Lower | Higher |
| Key trigger | Visual identity feels dated | Strategic foundation is no longer accurate |
| Risk of over-investment | Low | Moderate if strategy is actually still sound |
The diagnostic questions that determine which path is right for you:
A useful real-world illustration: when Oliver came to us, their brand's positioning was sound — what had shifted was the category around them. That's a classic refresh scenario, not a rebrand. The challenge wasn't redefining who Oliver was; it was making sure the brand's visual expression was doing justice to the strong strategic foundation already in place. Understanding that distinction saved time, budget, and creative energy that would have been wasted on a rebrand scope the brief didn't actually require.
There's a real cost to choosing the wrong scope. Organizations that do a refresh when they need a rebrand end up spending money on new visual assets that still fail to resonate — because the underlying positioning problem hasn't been addressed. The brand looks different but feels just as irrelevant to the new audience it's trying to reach.
The opposite mistake is less common but equally wasteful: commissioning a full rebrand when a targeted refresh would have achieved the same result, at lower cost and with less disruption to the organization. A rebrand is a significant undertaking — particularly the stakeholder alignment and rollout phases. Doing it when it isn't necessary introduces risk without proportionate return.
Once you've determined that a full rebrand is the right scope, working through a structured rebranding checklist ensures every phase gets the attention it needs. And what rebranding services actually cost vs a lighter refresh is a worthwhile read before you start scoping agency conversations.
The strategic triggers that typically drive the decision — and the real-world examples behind each one — are covered in detail in why companies rebrand. If you're still in diagnosis mode, continue there.
When you're ready to talk scope, our brand strategy team can help you figure out which path is right for your situation — and what either one actually involves.
A brand refresh updates visual elements — logo, colours, typography — without changing the brand's strategic foundation. A full rebrand revisits the foundation itself: positioning, audience, messaging, and identity. The distinction matters because the problem they solve is different. If your strategy is still accurate, refresh. If your strategy is outdated, rebrand. Choosing the wrong scope wastes budget and often fails to solve the underlying problem.
A full rebrand is warranted when the brand's strategic foundation — its positioning, audience definition, or core differentiation — is no longer accurate. Common triggers include mergers and acquisitions, market repositioning, significant company pivots, and reputational issues. A brand refresh is sufficient when the strategy is sound but the visual identity feels dated or inconsistent with how the company is now presenting itself.
A brand refresh typically costs significantly less than a full rebrand because the strategic work — positioning, messaging architecture, audience research — is already done. A refresh scope is primarily a design and production exercise. A full rebrand includes research, strategy development, stakeholder alignment, and identity creation before any visual assets are produced. The investment gap between the two can be substantial depending on the scope of the strategic work required.
A brand refresh typically includes logo refinements or variations, colour palette updates, typography changes, updated photography and visual style guidelines, tone of voice refinements, and updated marketing templates. It does not include a repositioning of the brand's strategy, a new audience definition, or a rethinking of the brand's core differentiation. Those changes require a full rebrand.
A full rebrand includes a new or redefined brand positioning statement, mission, vision and values, target audience personas, messaging architecture, visual identity system, brand voice and tone guidelines, a comprehensive brand book, and a rollout plan covering all touchpoints. In some cases it also includes a name change. The scope is much broader than a visual update because the problem it's solving is strategic, not aesthetic.
Only if the underlying brand strategy is still accurate. If your positioning is outdated, your audience has shifted, or your competitive differentiation has eroded, a refresh won't fix those problems — it will just give you a newer-looking version of a brand that still isn't working strategically. The key diagnostic question is whether your brand's strategic foundation is still sound. If it isn't, a refresh is at best a delay and at worst a waste of budget.
A brand refresh typically takes six to eight weeks from briefing to final asset delivery, depending on the number of touchpoints involved and the complexity of the visual system. A full rebrand takes 12 to 16 weeks — longer if the organization has multiple business units, international markets, or a complex stakeholder approval process. The timeline difference reflects the additional strategic phases a rebrand requires before any creative work begins.