css properties font-variation-settings

The font-variation-settings CSS property provides low-level control over variable font characteristics by letting you specify the four letter axis names of the characteristics you want to vary along with their values.

Syntax

/* Use the default settings */
font-variation-settings: normal;

/* Set values for variable font axis names */
font-variation-settings: "XHGT" 0.7;

/* Global values */
font-variation-settings: inherit;
font-variation-settings: initial;
font-variation-settings: revert;
font-variation-settings: revert-layer;
font-variation-settings: unset;

Values

This property's value can take one of two forms:

normal

Text is laid out using default settings.

<string> <number>

When rendering text, the list of variable font axis names is passed to the text layout engine to enable or disable font features. Each setting is always one or more pairs consisting of a <string> of 4 ASCII characters followed by a number indicating the axis value to set. If the <string> has more or fewer characters or contains characters outside the U+20 - U+7E code point range, the whole property is invalid. The <number> can be fractional or negative, depending on the value range available in your font, as defined by the font designer.

Description

This property is a low-level mechanism designed to set variable font features where no other way to enable or access those features exist. You should only use it when no basic properties exist to set those features (e.g. font-weight, font-style).

Font characteristics set using font-variation-settings will always override those set using the corresponding basic font properties, e.g. font-weight, no matter where they appear in the cascade. In some browsers, this is currently only true when the @font-face declaration includes a font-weight range.

Registered and custom axes

Variable font axes come in two types: registered and custom.

Registered axes are the most commonly encountered — common enough that the authors of the specification felt they were worth standardizing. Note that this doesn't mean that the author has to include all of these in their font.

Here are the registered axes along with their corresponding CSS properties:

Axis Tag CSS Property
"wght" font-weight
"wdth" font-stretch
"slnt" (slant) font-style: oblique + angle
"ital" font-style: italic
"opsz"

font-optical-sizing

Custom axes can be anything the font designer wants to vary in their font, for example ascender or descender heights, the size of serifs, or anything else they can imagine. Any axis can be used as long as it is given a unique 4-character axis. Some will end up becoming more common, and may even become registered over time.

Note: Registered axis tags are identified using lower-case tags, whereas custom axes should be given upper-case tags. Note that font designers aren't forced to follow this practice in any way, and some won't. The important takeaway here is that axis tags are case-sensitive.

To use variable fonts on your operating system, you need to make sure that it is up to date. For example Linux OSes need the latest Linux Freetype version, and macOS before 10.13 does not support variable fonts. If your operating system is not up to date, you will not be able to use variable fonts in web pages or the Firefox Developer Tools.

Formal definition

Initial valuenormal
Applies toall elements and text
Inheritedyes
Computed valuethe keyword normal or a list, each item a string paired with a number
Animation type(see prose)

Formal syntax

normal | [ <string> <number>]#

Examples

You can find a number of other variable font examples in our Variable fonts guide.

Controlling variable font weight (wght)

You can edit the CSS in the example below to play with different font weight values. See what happens when you specify a value outside the weight range.

Controlling variable font slant (slnt)

You can edit the CSS in the example below to play with different font slant/oblique values.

See also