::placeholder
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since January 2020.
The ::placeholder
CSS pseudo-element represents the placeholder text in an <input>
or <textarea>
element.
Try it
Only the subset of CSS properties that apply to the ::first-line
pseudo-element can be used in a rule using ::placeholder
in its selector.
Note: In most browsers, the appearance of placeholder text is a translucent or light gray color by default.
Syntax
::placeholder {
/* ... */
}
Accessibility
Color contrast
Contrast Ratio
Placeholder text typically has a lighter color treatment to indicate that it is a suggestion for what kind of input will be valid, and is not actual input of any kind.
It is important to ensure that the contrast ratio between the color of the placeholder text and the background of the input is high enough that people experiencing low vision conditions will be able to read it while also making sure there is enough of a difference between the placeholder text and input text color that users do not mistake the placeholder for inputted data.
Color contrast ratio is determined by comparing the luminosity of the placeholder text and the input background color values. In order to meet current Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), a ratio of 4.5:1 is required for text content and 3:1 for larger text such as headings. Large text is defined as 18.66px and bold or larger, or 24px or larger.
- WebAIM: Color Contrast Checker
- MDN Understanding WCAG, Guideline 1.4 explanations
- Understanding Success Criterion 1.4.3 | W3C Understanding WCAG 2.0
Usability
Placeholder text with sufficient color contrast may be interpreted as entered input. Placeholder text will also disappear when a person enters content into an <input>
element. Both of these circumstances can interfere with successful form completion, especially for people with cognitive concerns.
An alternate approach to providing placeholder information is to include it outside of the input in close visual proximity, then use aria-describedby
to programmatically associate the <input>
with its hint.
With this implementation, the hint content is available even if information is entered into the input field, and the input appears free of preexisting input when the page is loaded. Most screen reading technology will use aria-describedby
to read the hint after the input's label text is announced, and the person using the screen reader can mute it if they find the extra information unnecessary.
<label for="user-email">Your email address</label>
<span id="user-email-hint" class="input-hint">Example: jane@sample.com</span>
<input
id="user-email"
aria-describedby="user-email-hint"
name="email"
type="email" />
Windows High Contrast Mode
Placeholder text will appear with the same styling as user-entered text content when rendered in Windows High Contrast Mode. This will make it difficult for some people to determine which content has been entered, and which content is placeholder text.
Labels
Examples
Change placeholder appearance
This example shows some of the adjustments that you can make to the styles of placeholder text.
HTML
<input placeholder="Type here" />
CSS
input::placeholder {
color: red;
font-size: 1.2em;
font-style: italic;
}
Result
Opaque text
Some browsers (such as Firefox) set the default opacity
of placeholders to something less than 100%. If you want fully opaque placeholder text, set opacity
to 1
.
HTML
<input placeholder="Default opacity" />
<input placeholder="Full opacity" class="force-opaque" />
CSS
::placeholder {
color: green;
}
.force-opaque::placeholder {
opacity: 1;
}
Result
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Pseudo-Elements Module Level 4 # placeholder-pseudo |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
- The
:placeholder-shown
pseudo-class styles an element that has an active placeholder. - Related HTML elements:
<input>
,<textarea>
- HTML forms