Element: scrollend event

Limited availability

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

The scrollend event fires when element scrolling has completed. Scrolling is considered completed when the scroll position has no more pending updates and the user has completed their gesture.

Scroll position updates include smooth or instant mouse wheel scrolling, keyboard scrolling, scroll-snap events, or other APIs and gestures which cause the scroll position to update. User gestures like touch panning or trackpad scrolling aren't complete until pointers or keys have released. If the scroll position did not change, then no scrollend event fires.

For detecting when scrolling inside a Document is complete, see the scrollend event of Document.

Syntax

Use the event name in methods like addEventListener(), or set an event handler property.

js
addEventListener("scrollend", (event) => {});

onscrollend = (event) => {};

Event type

A generic Event.

Example

Using scrollend with an event listener

The following example shows how to use the scrollend event to detect when the user has stopped scrolling:

html
<div id="scroll-box">
  <p id="scroll-box-title">Scroll me!</p>
  <p id="large-element"></p>
</div>
<p id="output">Waiting on scroll events...</p>
js
const element = document.querySelector("div#scroll-box");
const output = document.querySelector("p#output");

element.addEventListener("scroll", (event) => {
  output.textContent = "scroll event fired, waiting for scrollend...";
});

element.addEventListener("scrollend", (event) => {
  output.textContent = "scrollend event fired!";
});

Using onscrollend event handler property

The following example shows how to use the onscrollend event handler property to detect when the user has stopped scrolling:

html
<div id="scroll-box">
  <p id="scroll-box-title">Scroll me!</p>
  <p id="large-element"></p>
</div>
<p id="output">Waiting on scroll events...</p>
js
const element = document.querySelector("div#scroll-box");
const output = document.querySelector("p#output");

element.onscroll = (event) => {
  output.textContent = "Element scroll event fired, waiting for scrollend...";
};

element.onscrollend = (event) => {
  output.textContent = "Element scrollend event fired!";
};

Specifications

Specification
CSSOM View Module
# eventdef-document-scrollend
HTML
# handler-onscrollend

Browser compatibility

Report problems with this compatibility data on GitHub
desktopmobile
Chrome
Edge
Firefox
Opera
Safari
Chrome Android
Firefox for Android
Opera Android
Safari on iOS
Samsung Internet
WebView Android
WebView on iOS
scrollend event

Legend

Tip: you can click/tap on a cell for more information.

Full support
Full support
No support
No support
See implementation notes.

See also