content-visibility

Limited availability

This feature is not Baseline because it does not work in some of the most widely-used browsers.

The content-visibility CSS property controls whether or not an element renders its contents at all, along with forcing a strong set of containments, allowing user agents to potentially omit large swathes of layout and rendering work until it becomes needed. It enables the user agent to skip an element's rendering work (including layout and painting) until it is needed — which makes the initial page load much faster.

Note: The contentvisibilityautostatechange event fires on any element with content-visibility: auto set on it when its rendering work starts or stops being skipped. This provides a convenient way for an app's code to start or stop rendering processes (e.g. drawing on a <canvas>) when they are not needed, thereby conserving processing power.

Try it

Syntax

css
/* Keyword values */
content-visibility: visible;
content-visibility: hidden;
content-visibility: auto;

/* Global values */
content-visibility: inherit;
content-visibility: initial;
content-visibility: revert;
content-visibility: revert-layer;
content-visibility: unset;

Values

visible

No effect. The element's contents are laid out and rendered as normal.

hidden

The element skips its contents. The skipped contents must not be accessible to user-agent features, such as find-in-page, tab-order navigation, etc., nor be selectable or focusable. This is similar to giving the contents display: none.

auto

The element turns on layout containment, style containment, and paint containment. If the element is not relevant to the user, it also skips its contents. Unlike hidden, the skipped contents must still be available as normal to user-agent features such as find-in-page, tab order navigation, etc., and must be focusable and selectable as normal.

Description

Animating and transitioning content-visibility

Supporting browsers animate/transition content-visibility with a variation on the discrete animation type.

Discrete animation generally means that the property will flip between two values 50% of the way through the animation. In the case of content-visibility, however, the browser will flip between the two values to show the animated content for the entire animation duration. So, for example:

  • When animating content-visibility from hidden to visible, the value will flip to visible at 0% of the animation duration so it is visible throughout.
  • When animating content-visibility from visible to hidden, the value will flip to hidden at 100% of the animation duration so it is visible throughout.

This behavior is useful for creating entry/exit animations where you want to, for example, remove some content from the DOM with content-visibility: hidden, but you want a smooth transition (such as a fade-out) rather than it disappearing immediately.

When animating content-visibility with CSS transitions, transition-behavior: allow-discrete needs to be set on content-visibility. This effectively enables content-visibility transitions.

Note: When transitioning an element's content-visibility value, you don't need to provide a set of starting values for transitioned properties using a @starting-style block, like you do when transitioning display. This is because content-visibility doesn't hide an element from the DOM like display does: it just skips rendering the element's content.

Formal definition

Initial valuevisible
Applies toelements for which size containment can apply
Inheritedno
Computed valueas specified
Animation typeDiscrete behavior except when animating to or from hidden is visible for the entire duration

Formal syntax

content-visibility = 
visible |
auto |
hidden

Accessibility

Off-screen content within a content-visibility: auto property remains in the document object model and the accessibility tree. This allows improving page performance with content-visibility: auto without negatively impacting accessibility.

Since styles for off-screen content are not rendered, elements intentionally hidden with display: none or visibility: hidden will still appear in the accessibility tree. If you don't want an element to appear in the accessibility tree, use aria-hidden="true".

Examples

Using auto to reduce rendering cost of long pages

The following example shows the use of content-visibility: auto to skip painting and rendering of off-screen sections. When a section is out of the viewport then the painting of the content is skipped until the section comes close to the viewport, this helps with both load and interactions on the page.

HTML

html
<section>
  <!-- Content for each section… -->
</section>
<section>
  <!-- Content for each section… -->
</section>
<section>
  <!-- Content for each section… -->
</section>
<!-- … -->

CSS

The contain-intrinsic-size property adds a default size of 500px to the height and width of each section element. After a section is rendered, it will retain its rendered intrinsic size, even when it is scrolled out of the viewport.

css
section {
  content-visibility: auto;
  contain-intrinsic-size: auto 500px;
}

Using hidden to manage visibility

The following example shows how to manage content visibility with JavaScript. Using content-visibility: hidden; instead of display: none; preserves the rendering state of content when hidden and rendering is faster.

HTML

html
<div class="hidden">
  <button class="toggle">Show</button>
  <p>
    This content is initially hidden and can be shown by clicking the button.
  </p>
</div>
<div class="visible">
  <button class="toggle">Hide</button>
  <p>
    This content is initially visible and can be hidden by clicking the button.
  </p>
</div>

CSS

The content-visibility property is set on paragraphs that are direct children of elements with the visible and hidden classes. In our example, we can show and hide content in paragraphs depending on the CSS class of parent div elements.

The contain-intrinsic-size property is included to represent the content size. This helps to reduce layout shift when content is hidden.

css
p {
  contain-intrinsic-size: 0 1.1em;
  border: dotted 2px;
}

.hidden > p {
  content-visibility: hidden;
}

.visible > p {
  content-visibility: visible;
}

JavaScript

js
const handleClick = (event) => {
  const button = event.target;
  const div = button.parentElement;
  button.textContent = div.classList.contains("visible") ? "Show" : "Hide";
  div.classList.toggle("hidden");
  div.classList.toggle("visible");
};

document.querySelectorAll("button.toggle").forEach((button) => {
  button.addEventListener("click", handleClick);
});

Result

Animating content-visibility

In this example, we have a <div> element, the content of which can be toggled between shown and hidden by clicking or pressing any key.

HTML

html
<p>
  Click anywhere on the screen or press any key to toggle the
  <code>&lt;div&gt;</code> content between hidden and showing.
</p>

<div>
  This is a <code>&lt;div&gt;</code> element that animates between
  <code>content-visibility: hidden;</code>and
  <code>content-visibility: visible;</code>. We've also animated the text color
  to create a smooth animation effect.
</div>

CSS

In the CSS we initially set content-visibility: hidden; on the <div> to hide its content. We then set up @keyframe animations and attach them to classes to show and hide the <div>, animating content-visibility and color so that you get a smooth animation effect as the content is shown/hidden.

css
div {
  font-size: 1.6rem;
  padding: 20px;
  border: 3px solid red;
  border-radius: 20px;
  width: 480px;

  content-visibility: hidden;
}

/* Animation classes */

.show {
  animation: show 0.7s ease-in forwards;
}

.hide {
  animation: hide 0.7s ease-out forwards;
}

/* Animation keyframes */

@keyframes show {
  0% {
    content-visibility: hidden;
    color: rgb(0 0 0 / 0%);
  }

  100% {
    content-visibility: visible;
    color: rgb(0 0 0 / 100%);
  }
}

@keyframes hide {
  0% {
    content-visibility: visible;
    color: rgb(0 0 0 / 100%);
  }

  100% {
    content-visibility: hidden;
    color: rgb(0 0 0 / 0%);
  }
}

JavaScript

Finally, we use JavaScript to apply the .show and .hide classes to the <div> as appropriate to apply the animations as it is toggled between shown and hidden states.

js
const divElem = document.querySelector("div");
const htmlElem = document.querySelector(":root");

htmlElem.addEventListener("click", showHide);
document.addEventListener("keydown", showHide);

function showHide() {
  if (divElem.classList[0] === "show") {
    divElem.classList.remove("show");
    divElem.classList.add("hide");
  } else {
    divElem.classList.remove("hide");
    divElem.classList.add("show");
  }
}

Result

The rendered result looks like this:

Specifications

Specification
CSS Containment Module Level 2
# content-visibility

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also