justify-self

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since October 2017.

The CSS justify-self property sets the way a box is justified inside its alignment container along the appropriate axis.

Try it

The effect of this property is dependent of the layout mode we are in:

  • In block-level layouts, it aligns an item inside its containing block on the inline axis.
  • For absolutely-positioned elements, it aligns an item inside its containing block on the inline axis, accounting for the offset values of top, left, bottom, and right.
  • In table cell layouts, this property is ignored. Read more about alignment in block, absolute positioned and table layout.
  • In flexbox layouts, this property is ignored. Read more about alignment in flexbox.
  • In grid layouts, it aligns an item inside its grid area on the inline axis. Read more about alignment in grid layouts.

Syntax

css
/* Basic keywords */
justify-self: auto;
justify-self: normal;
justify-self: stretch;

/* Positional alignment */
justify-self: center; /* Pack item around the center */
justify-self: start; /* Pack item from the start */
justify-self: end; /* Pack item from the end */
justify-self: flex-start; /* Equivalent to 'start'. Note that justify-self is ignored in flexbox layouts. */
justify-self: flex-end; /* Equivalent to 'end'. Note that justify-self is ignored in flexbox layouts. */
justify-self: self-start;
justify-self: self-end;
justify-self: left; /* Pack item from the left */
justify-self: right; /* Pack item from the right */
justify-self: anchor-center;

/* Baseline alignment */
justify-self: baseline;
justify-self: first baseline;
justify-self: last baseline;

/* Overflow alignment (for positional alignment only) */
justify-self: safe center;
justify-self: unsafe center;

/* Global values */
justify-self: inherit;
justify-self: initial;
justify-self: revert;
justify-self: revert-layer;
justify-self: unset;

This property can take one of three different forms:

  • Basic keywords: one of the keyword values normal, auto, or stretch.

  • Baseline alignment: the baseline keyword, plus optionally one of first or last.

  • Positional alignment:

    • one of: center, start, end, flex-start, flex-end, self-start, self-end, left, or right.
    • Plus optionally safe or unsafe.

Values

auto

The value used is the value of the justify-items property of the parents box, unless the box has no parent, or is absolutely positioned, in these cases, auto represents normal.

normal

The effect of this keyword is dependent of the layout mode we are in:

  • In block-level layouts, the keyword is a synonym of start.
  • In absolutely-positioned layouts, the keyword behaves like start on replaced absolutely-positioned boxes, and as stretch on all other absolutely-positioned boxes.
  • In table cell layouts, this keyword has no meaning as this property is ignored.
  • In flexbox layouts, this keyword has no meaning as this property is ignored.
  • In grid layouts, this keyword leads to a behavior similar to the one of stretch, except for boxes with an aspect ratio or an intrinsic sizes where it behaves like start.
start

The item is packed flush to each other toward the start edge of the alignment container in the appropriate axis.

end

The item is packed flush to each other toward the end edge of the alignment container in the appropriate axis.

flex-start

For items that are not children of a flex container, this value is treated like start.

flex-end

For items that are not children of a flex container, this value is treated like end.

self-start

The item is packed flush to the edge of the alignment container of the start side of the item, in the appropriate axis.

self-end

The item is packed flush to the edge of the alignment container of the end side of the item, in the appropriate axis.

center

The items are packed flush to each other toward the center of the alignment container.

left

The items are packed flush to each other toward the left edge of the alignment container. If the property's axis is not parallel with the inline axis, this value behaves like start.

The items are packed flush to each other toward the right edge of the alignment container in the appropriate axis. If the property's axis is not parallel with the inline axis, this value behaves like start.

baseline, first baseline, last baseline

Specifies participation in first- or last-baseline alignment: aligns the alignment baseline of the box's first or last baseline set with the corresponding baseline in the shared first or last baseline set of all the boxes in its baseline-sharing group. The fallback alignment for first baseline is start, the one for last baseline is end.

stretch

If the combined size of the items is less than the size of the alignment container, any auto-sized items have their size increased equally (not proportionally), while still respecting the constraints imposed by max-height/max-width (or equivalent functionality), so that the combined size exactly fills the alignment container.

anchor-center

In the case of anchor-positioned elements, aligns the item to the center of the associated anchor element in the inline direction. See Centering on the anchor using anchor-center.

safe

If the size of the item overflows the alignment container, the item is instead aligned as if the alignment mode were start.

unsafe

Regardless of the relative sizes of the item and alignment container, the given alignment value is honored.

Formal definition

Initial valueauto
Applies toblock-level boxes, absolutely-positioned boxes, and grid items
Inheritedno
Computed valueas specified
Animation typediscrete

Formal syntax

justify-self = 
auto |
normal |
stretch |
<baseline-position> |
<overflow-position>? [ <self-position> | left | right ] |
anchor-center

<baseline-position> =
[ first | last ]? &&
baseline

<overflow-position> =
unsafe |
safe

<self-position> =
center |
start |
end |
self-start |
self-end |
flex-start |
flex-end

Examples

Basic demonstration

In the following example we have a simple 2 x 2 grid layout. Initially the grid container is given a justify-items value of stretch — the default — which causes the grid items to stretch across the entire width of their cells.

The second, third, and fourth grid items are then given different values of justify-self, to show how these override the justify-items value. These values cause the grid items to span only as wide as their content width, and align in different positions across their cells.

HTML

html
<article class="container">
  <span>First child</span>
  <span>Second child</span>
  <span>Third child</span>
  <span>Fourth child</span>
</article>

CSS

css
html {
  font-family: helvetica, arial, sans-serif;
  letter-spacing: 1px;
}

article {
  background-color: red;
  display: grid;
  grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr;
  grid-auto-rows: 40px;
  grid-gap: 10px;
  margin: 20px;
  width: 300px;
  justify-items: stretch;
}

span:nth-child(2) {
  justify-self: start;
}

span:nth-child(3) {
  justify-self: center;
}

span:nth-child(4) {
  justify-self: end;
}

article span {
  background-color: black;
  color: white;
  margin: 1px;
  text-align: center;
}

article,
span {
  padding: 10px;
  border-radius: 7px;
}

Result

Specifications

Specification
CSS Box Alignment Module Level 3
# justify-self-property

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also