The background-clip
CSS property sets whether an element's background extends underneath its border box, padding box, or content box.
If the element has no background-image
or background-color
, this property will only have a visual effect when the border has transparent regions or partially opaque regions (due to border-style
or border-image
); otherwise, the border masks the difference.
Note: Because the root element has a different background painting area, the background-clip
property has no effect when specified on it. See "The backgrounds of special elements."
Note: For documents whose root element is an HTML element: if the computed value of background-image
on the root element is none
and its background-color
is transparent
, user agents must instead propagate the computed values of the background
properties from that element's first HTML <body>
child element. The used values of that <body>
element's background
properties are their initial values, and the propagated values are treated as if they were specified on the root element. It is recommended that authors of HTML documents specify the canvas background for the <body>
element rather than the HTML element.
Syntax
/* Keyword values */ background-clip: border-box; background-clip: padding-box; background-clip: content-box; background-clip: text; /* Global values */ background-clip: inherit; background-clip: initial; background-clip: revert; background-clip: revert-layer; background-clip: unset;
Values
border-box
-
The background extends to the outside edge of the border (but underneath the border in z-ordering).
padding-box
-
The background extends to the outside edge of the padding. No background is drawn beneath the border.
content-box
-
The background is painted within (clipped to) the content box.
text
-
The background is painted within (clipped to) the foreground text.
Accessibility concerns
When using background-clip: text
check that the contrast ratio between the background color and the color of the text placed over it is high enough that people experiencing low vision conditions will be able to read the content of the page.
If the background image does not load, this could also lead to the text becoming unreadable. Add a fallback background-color
to prevent this from happening, and test without the image.
Consider using feature queries with @supports
to test for support of background-clip: text
and provide an accessible alternative where it is not supported.
Formal definition
Initial value | border-box |
---|---|
Applies to | all elements |
Inherited | no |
Computed value | as specified |
Animation type | repeatable list |
Formal syntax
<bg-clip>#
Examples
HTML
<p class="border-box">The background extends behind the border.</p> <p class="padding-box"> The background extends to the inside edge of the border. </p> <p class="content-box"> The background extends only to the edge of the content box. </p> <p class="text">The background is clipped to the foreground text.</p>
CSS
p { border: 0.8em darkviolet; border-style: dotted double; margin: 1em 0; padding: 1.4em; background: linear-gradient(60deg, red, yellow, red, yellow, red); font: 900 1.2em sans-serif; text-decoration: underline; } .border-box { background-clip: border-box; } .padding-box { background-clip: padding-box; } .content-box { background-clip: content-box; } .text { background-clip: text; -webkit-background-clip: text; color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2); }
See also
- The
clip-path
property creates a clipping region that defines what part of an entire element should be displayed. - Background properties:
background
,background-color
,background-image
,background-origin
- Introduction to the CSS box model