font-weight
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The font-weight
CSS descriptor allows authors to specify font weights for the fonts specified in the @font-face
at-rule. The font-weight
property can separately be used to set how thick or thin characters in text should be displayed.
For a particular font family, authors can download various font faces which correspond to the different styles of the same font family, and then use the font-weight
descriptor to explicitly specify the font face's weights. The values for the CSS descriptor is same as that of its corresponding font property.
There are generally limited weights available for a particular font family. When a specified weight doesn't exist, a nearby weight is used. Fonts lacking bold typeface are often synthesized by the user agent. To prevent this, use the font-synthesis
shorthand property.
Syntax
/* Single values */
font-weight: normal;
font-weight: bold;
font-weight: 400;
/* Multiple Values */
font-weight: normal bold;
font-weight: 300 500;
The font-weight
property is described using any one of the values listed below.
Values
normal
-
Normal font weight. Same as
400
. bold
-
Bold font weight. Same as
700
. <number>
-
A
<number>
value between 1 and 1000, inclusive. Higher numbers represent weights that are bolder than (or as bold as) lower numbers. Certain commonly used values correspond to common weight names, as described in the Common weight name mapping section below.
In earlier versions of the font-weight
specification, the property accepts only keyword values and the numeric values 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, and 900; non-variable fonts can only really make use of these set values, although fine-grained values (e.g. 451) will be translated to one of these values for non-variable fonts.
CSS Fonts Level 4 extends the syntax to accept any number between 1 and 1000, inclusive, and introduces Variable fonts, which can make use of this much finer-grained range of font weights.
Common weight name mapping
The numerical values 100
to 900
roughly correspond to the following common weight names:
Value | Common weight name |
---|---|
100 | Thin (Hairline) |
200 | Extra Light (Ultra Light) |
300 | Light |
400 | Normal |
500 | Medium |
600 | Semi Bold (Demi Bold) |
700 | Bold |
800 | Extra Bold (Ultra Bold) |
900 | Black (Heavy) |
Variable fonts
Most fonts have a particular weight which corresponds to one of the numbers in Common weight name mapping. However some fonts, called variable fonts, can support a range of weights with more or less fine granularity, and this can give the designer a much closer degree of control over the chosen weight.
For TrueType or OpenType variable fonts, the "wght" variation is used to implement varying weights.
Accessibility
People experiencing low vision conditions may have difficulty reading text set with a font-weight
value of 100
(Thin/Hairline) or 200
(Extra Light), especially if the font has a low contrast color ratio.
Formal definition
Related at-rule | @font-face |
---|---|
Initial value | normal |
Computed value | as specified |
Formal syntax
font-weight =
auto |
<font-weight-absolute>{1,2}
<font-weight-absolute> =
normal |
bold |
<number [1,1000]>
Examples
Setting normal font weight in a @font-face rule
The following finds a local Open Sans font or imports it, and allows using the font for normal font weights.
@font-face {
font-family: "Open Sans";
src:
local("Open Sans") format("woff2"),
url("/fonts/OpenSans-Regular-webfont.woff") format("woff");
font-weight: 400;
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Fonts Module Level 4 # font-prop-desc |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser