Baseline Widely available
The <option>
HTML element is used to define an item contained in a <select>
, an <optgroup>
, or a <datalist>
element. As such, <option>
can represent menu items in popups and other lists of items in an HTML document.
<label for="pet-select">Choose a pet:</label>
<select id="pet-select">
<option value="">--Please choose an option--</option>
<option value="dog">Dog</option>
<option value="cat">Cat</option>
<option value="hamster">Hamster</option>
<option value="parrot">Parrot</option>
<option value="spider">Spider</option>
<option value="goldfish">Goldfish</option>
</select>
label {
font-family: sans-serif;
font-size: 1rem;
padding-right: 10px;
}
select {
font-size: 0.9rem;
padding: 2px 5px;
}
Attributes
This element includes the global attributes.
disabled
If this Boolean attribute is set, this option is not checkable. Often browsers grey out such control and it won't receive any browsing event, like mouse clicks or focus-related ones. If this attribute is not set, the element can still be disabled if one of its ancestors is a disabled <optgroup>
element.
label
This attribute is text for the label indicating the meaning of the option. If the label
attribute isn't defined, its value is that of the element text content.
selected
If present, this Boolean attribute indicates that the option is initially selected. If the <option>
element is the descendant of a <select>
element whose multiple
attribute is not set, only one single <option>
of this <select>
element may have the selected
attribute.
value
The content of this attribute represents the value to be submitted with the form, should this option be selected. If this attribute is omitted, the value is taken from the text content of the option element.
Styling <option>
elements has historically been highly limited. Customizable select elements explains newer features that enable their full customization, just like any regular DOM element.
In browsers that don't support the modern customization features (or legacy codebases where they can't be used), the styling available on <option>
elements depends on the browser and operating system. Depending on the operating system, the font-size
of the owning <select>
is respected in Firefox and Chromium. Chromium may additionally allow color
, background-color
, font-family
, font-variant
, and text-align
to be set.
You can find more details about legacy <option>
styling in our guide to advanced form styling.
See <select>
for examples.
<select>
elements, only text content is permitted, possibly with escaped characters (like é
). In customizable select elements, <option>
elements can have any arbitrary content. Tag omission The start tag is mandatory. The end tag is optional if this element is immediately followed by another <option>
element or an <optgroup>
, or if the parent element has no more content. Permitted parents A <select>
, an <optgroup>
or a <datalist>
element. Implicit ARIA role option
Permitted ARIA roles No role
permitted DOM interface HTMLOptionElement
Specifications Browser compatibility See also
<form>
, <legend>
, <label>
, <button>
, <select>
, <datalist>
, <optgroup>
, <fieldset>
, <textarea>
, <input>
, <output>
, <progress>
and <meter>
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