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Remove blue border from css custom-styled button in Chrome

I'm working on a web page, and I want custom-styled <button> tags. So with CSS, I said: border: none. Now it works perfectly in safari, but in chrome, when I click one of the buttons, it puts an annoying blue border around it. I thought button:active { outline: none } or button:focus { outline:none } would work, but neither do. Any ideas?

This is what it looks like before being clicked (and how I want it to still look after being clicked):

https://i.stack.imgur.com/WVZZe.png

And this is the border I'm talking about:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/XwWNF.png

Here is my CSS:

button.launch {
    background-color: #F9A300;
    border: none;
    height: 40px;
    padding: 5px 15px;
    color: #ffffff;
    font-size: 16px;
    font-weight: 300;
    margin-top: 10px;
    margin-right: 10px;
}

button.launch:hover {
    cursor: pointer;
    background-color: #FABD44;
}

button.change {
    background-color: #F88F00;
    border: none;
    height: 40px;
    padding: 5px 15px;
    color: #ffffff;
    font-size: 16px;
    font-weight: 300;
    margin-top: 10px;
    margin-right: 10px;
}

button.change:hover {
    cursor: pointer;
    background-color: #F89900;
}

button:active {
    outline: none;
    border: none;
}
Looks ok to me? jsbin.com/oSAdovun/1/edit
I'm not sure why it works in your demo.. It is doing it here: jsfiddle.net/NgL8H @davidpauljunior
I added the focus rule to the bottom which you said didn't work, but it does seem to: jsfiddle.net/NgL8H/1
You shouldn't remove the outline completely - those with disabilities - and those like me who often use the keyboard because it's fast - need it to navigate. It'd be much better to re-style the outline to something you like.
Please don't set outline: none like this unless you are ready to replace the loss in accessibility. See this website: outlinenone.com

I
IliasT

Doing this is not recommended as it regresses the accessibility of your site; for more info, see this post.

That said, if you insist, this CSS should work:

button:focus {outline:0;}

Check it out or JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/u4pXu/

Or in this snippet:

button.launch { background-color: #F9A300; border: none; height: 40px; padding: 5px 15px; color: #ffffff; font-size: 16px; font-weight: 300; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 10px; } button.launch:hover { cursor: pointer; background-color: #FABD44; } button.launch { background-color: #F9A300; border: none; height: 40px; padding: 5px 15px; color: #ffffff; font-size: 16px; font-weight: 300; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 10px; } button.launch:hover { cursor: pointer; background-color: #FABD44; } button.change { background-color: #F88F00; border: none; height: 40px; padding: 5px 15px; color: #ffffff; font-size: 16px; font-weight: 300; margin-top: 10px; margin-right: 10px; } button.change:hover { cursor: pointer; background-color: #F89900; } button:active { outline: none; border: none; } button:focus {outline:0;}


Shouldn't this actually be outline: none; or doesn't that matter?
@henrywright Well, the OP tried that and didn't worked for him.
Please never do this. Your minor grievance is irrelevant to the massive accessibility issue this becomes
You should definitely re-style this instead of hiding it completely. In this case, try something like button:focus{ outline-color: #A75000 } … instead of hiding the indicator you change it to a dark orange that fits the style.
@SeanO'Brien granted the OP's given situation might be for a site that has 5 users, all able bodied. But probably the majority of the 1123 people who have upvoted this think this is the right way to do things for their given situation but actually it isn't as it's discriminatory.
N
Nathan

Wait! There's a reason for that ugly outline!

Before removing that ugly blue outline, you may want to take accessibility into consideration. By default, that blue outline is placed on focusable elements. This is so that users with accessibility issues are able to focus that button by tabbing to it. Some users do not have the motor skills to use a mouse and must use only the keyboard (or some other input device) for computer interaction. When you remove the blue outline, there is no longer a visual indicator on what element is focused. If you are going to remove the blue outline, you should replace it with another type of visual indication that the button is focused.

Possible Solution: Darken Buttons when focused

For the examples below, Chrome's blue outline was first removed by using button:focus { outline:0 !important; }

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Rj3Pu.png

https://i.stack.imgur.com/wb0vw.png

https://i.stack.imgur.com/jInZM.png

As you can see, the buttons are a little darker when they receive focus. Personally, I would recommend making the focused buttons even darker so that there is a very noticeable difference between the focused state and the normal state of the button.

It's not just for disabled users

Making your site more accessible is something that is often overlooked but can help create a more productive experience in your website. There are many normal users that use keyboard commands to navigate through websites in order to keep hands on the keyboard.


The issue is in Chrome it happens even on click rather than just tabbing (the logical implementation found in most browsers). So actually Google is reducing accessibility as most devs will simply turn this off (in Chrome) More time wasted in researching/fixing issues related to Google/Chrome (password saving, email css support, this)
You right! To take accessibility in account when removing outline, you need a bit of JavaScript: paciellogroup.com/blog/2012/04/…
you can't even style/format a comment in the way that you can an answer, tho. hard to provide feedback at this level of detail solely via a comment.
@RunLoop How do you remove or change the blue border after the click? Can it be done via CSS or is Javascript required?
people with those issues can simply use vimium-ff
W
WasiF

In my instance of this problem I had to specify box-shadow: none

button:focus {
  outline:none;
  box-shadow: none;
}

Thanks for your post! The "box-shadow" property was the point in my case.
This was the same issue for me. Not that it's relevant but I was using Roots' Sage Theme in Chrome on Ubuntu 17.10.
I had to add !important to get it to work, probably bootstrap has a specific definition for this somewhere
this worked for me mate!, thanks for the posting the solution. cheers
Yes it is box-shadow in bootstrap for example
M
Mike

I just remove the outline from all the tags in the page by selecting all and applying outline:none to everything:)

*:focus {outline:none}

As bagofcole mentioned, you might need to add !important as well, so the style will look like this:

*:focus {outline:none !important}

Please do not do this. Users who navigate your page with the keyboard will be unable to see the currently focused element. Instead of hiding the outline, blur the element if the click event originates from a mouse.
Not recommended that way
P
Popnoodles

Don't forget the !important declaration, for a better result

button:focus {outline:0 !important;}

A rule that has the !important property will always be applied no matter where that rule appears in the CSS document.


"for a better result"? Could you explain what !important does?
But can you explain what it does? "For the reason it exists" doesn't explain to people who don't know its reason what its reason is.
!important should be used rarely, and only to make sure that something shouldn't be overwritten by subsequent rules. You should target your elements with the correct selector when overwriting previous rules.
The usage of !important is rarely justified. You should always scope your css selectors in a way that make more sense, and not use !important just because it gives you a "better result".
Please don't do this. While technically this answers the OP's question, nuking every indication of focus position with outline:0 !important is bad UX and bad dev practice. If you're doing this, please make sure you're doing something else to indicate focus position (like changing background color of element).
F
Flimm

Removing outline is terrible for accessibility! Ideally, the focus ring shows up only when the user intends to use the keyboard.

Use :focus-visible. It's currently a W3C proposal for styling keyboard-only focus using CSS, and is supported in Firefox (caniuse). Until other major browsers support it, you can use this robust polyfill.

/* Remove outline for non-keyboard :focus */
*:focus:not(.focus-visible) {
  outline: none;
}

/* Optional: Customize .focus-visible */
.focus-visible {
  outline-color: lightgreen;
}

I also wrote a more detailed post just in case you need more info.


Mind you, AFAIK it doesn't need to be outline as such, as long as the :focus state is made clearly visible via some other means, like border, background-color, box-shadow, etc.
Best answer! Your post is worth a read (and I am now looking at the rest of your blog 😅) The focus-visible npm package is really where it's at for now.
This is definitely the best solution. With just a few lines of code I got rid of that annoying blue border on click, while keeping it on keyboard use. Thanks!
Is this data correct? This selector seems supported in Chrome, not Firefox. developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/…
It seems that in Firefox, the selector is called :-moz-focusring, but contrary to what the docs say, it does not differentiate between click and tab focus. In Chrome, as of now you need to enable specific flags for it to work
P
Pang

Add this in your CSS file.

*{
  -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0) !important;
}

thank you. worked but MDN say: This feature is non-standard and is not on a standards track. Do not use it on production sites facing the Web: it will not work for every user. There may also be large incompatibilities between implementations and the behavior may change in the future.
c
chronomer

The fix for Chrome and other browsers

button:focus { outline: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; }

P
Pokechu22

Use either this:

:active {
    outline:none;
}

or this if that doesn't work:

:active {
   outline:none !important;
}

This works for me (FF and Chrome, at least). Instead of targeting the :focus state, just target the :active state and that will remove the aesthetically obtrusive highlighting in your browser when a user clicks a link. But it will still retain the focus states when a user with disabilities tabs or shift-tabs through a page. Both parties are happy. :)


Why edit my answer if you're only going to replace my minified version with the same code but extended? That didn't clarify it any better for users. Do you get answer credits for that or something? LOL...
the point of StackExchange sites like this is to have answers that help anyone reading them to understand. For that purpose, an answer with terse, minified code is not as helpful as readably-formatted code. Improving answers by making them more readable is a normal way to improve the site for everyone.
B
Behnam Mohammadi

for this problem:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/lCIsl.png

use this:

   *{
         -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0,0,0,0);
         -webkit-tap-highlight-color: transparent; /* For some Androids */
    }

result:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/ojkqs.png


A
ATL_DEV

Most of the solutions will not work if you're using Bootstrap 4.1 and possibly other versions. After much head banging, I discovered you need to apply the shadow-none class:

<button class="btn shadow-none">Bootstrap (4.1) button without shadow</button>

F
Forever Nomad

For anyone using Bootstrap and having this problem, they use :active:focus as well as just :active and :focus so you'll need:

element:active:focus {
    outline: 0;
}

Hopefully saved someone some time figuring that one out, banged my head for bit wondering why such a simple thing wasn't working.


K
Kamil Z

I had the same problem with bootstrap. I solved with both outline and box-shadow

.btn:focus, .btn.focus {
    outline: none !important;
    box-shadow: 0 0 0 0 rgba(0, 123, 255, 0) !important; // or none
}

R
Rob Myrick

This is what worked for me:

button:focus {
    box-shadow:none;
}

T
Tobija Fischer

Another way to solve the accessibility problem that hasn't been mentioned here yet is through a little bit of Javascript. Credits go this insightful blogpost from hackernoon: https://hackernoon.com/removing-that-ugly-focus-ring-and-keeping-it-too-6c8727fefcd2

The approach here is really simple yet effective: Adding a class when people start using the tab-key to navigate the page (and optionally remove it when the switch to mouse again. Then you can use this class to either display a focus outline or not.

function handleFirstTab(e) {
    if (e.keyCode === 9) { // the "I am a keyboard user" key
        document.body.classList.add('user-is-tabbing');
        window.removeEventListener('keydown', handleFirstTab);
    }
}

window.addEventListener('keydown', handleFirstTab);

Simple and effective... Love it.
S
Santosh Khalse

try this code for all element which have blue border problem

*{
outline: none;
}

or

*{
outline-style: none;
}

p
pavelkarev

Until all modern browsers will start support css-selector :focus-visible, the simplest and possibly best way to save accessibility is to remove this tricky focus only for mouse users and to save it for keyboard users:

1.Use this tiny polyfill (about 10kb): https://github.com/WICG/focus-visible
2.Add next code somewhere in your css:

.js-focus-visible :focus:not(.focus-visible) {
  outline: none;
}

Browser-support of css4-selector :focus-visible right now very weak:
https://caniuse.com/#search=focus-visible


a
apurv thakur

I faced the same issue so I used simple CSS-

.custom-button {
    outline: none
}

P
Pang

If you want to delete same effect in input, you could add the following code as well as button.

input:focus {outline:0;}

F
Felipe Augusto

Simply write outline:none;. No need to use pseudo element focus


P
Pauloco

Ok, even with the risk of never getting anyone to see this, because there are already so many answers I wanted to offer more js solutions as of the year 2020 there are plenty:

outline.js or alternatively outliner.js both libraries solving exactly the issues we all have here: remove outlines for mice but keep keyboard functionality or accessability.

So instead of deciding which is more important style or accessability, choose both!


F
Faisal Russel

Use this bellow code for Chakra UI,

:focus {
  box-shadow: none !important;
}

*[data-focus] {
  box-shadow: none !important;
}`

J
Josh Lee

This is an issue in the Chrome family and has been there forever.

A bug has been raised https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=904208

It can be shown here: https://codepen.io/anon/pen/Jedvwj as soon as you add a border to anything button-like (say role="button" has been added to a tag for example) Chrome messes up and sets the focus state when you click with your mouse.

I highly recommend using this fix: https://github.com/wicg/focus-visible.

Just do the following

npm install --save focus-visible

Add the script to your html:

<script src="/node_modules/focus-visible/dist/focus-visible.min.js"></script>

or import into your main entry file if using webpack or something similar:

import 'focus-visible/dist/focus-visible.min';

then put this in your css file:

// hide the focus indicator if element receives focus via mouse, but show on keyboard focus (on tab).
.js-focus-visible :focus:not(.focus-visible) {
  outline: none;
}

// Define a strong focus indicator for keyboard focus.
// If you skip this then the browser's default focus indicator will display instead
// ideally use outline property for those users using windows high contrast mode
.js-focus-visible .focus-visible {
  outline: magenta auto 5px;
}

You can just set:

button:focus {outline:0;}

but if you have a large number of users, you're disadvantaging those who cannot use mice or those who just want to use their keyboard for speed.


k
kostikovmu

To remove blue background on tap, i use

button {
  -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0,0,0,0);
}