Intersection Observer API

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since March 2019.

The Intersection Observer API provides a way to asynchronously observe changes in the intersection of a target element with an ancestor element or with a top-level document's viewport.

Historically, detecting visibility of an element, or the relative visibility of two elements in relation to each other, has been a difficult task for which solutions have been unreliable and prone to causing the browser and the sites the user is accessing to become sluggish. As the web has matured, the need for this kind of information has grown. Intersection information is needed for many reasons, such as:

  • Lazy-loading of images or other content as a page is scrolled.
  • Implementing "infinite scrolling" websites, where more and more content is loaded and rendered as you scroll, so that the user doesn't have to flip through pages.
  • Reporting of visibility of advertisements in order to calculate ad revenues.
  • Deciding whether or not to perform tasks or animation processes based on whether or not the user will see the result.

Implementing intersection detection in the past involved event handlers and loops calling methods like Element.getBoundingClientRect() to build up the needed information for every element affected. Since all this code runs on the main thread, even one of these can cause performance problems. When a site is loaded with these tests, things can get downright ugly.

Consider a web page that uses infinite scrolling. It uses a vendor-provided library to manage the advertisements placed periodically throughout the page, has animated graphics here and there, and uses a custom library that draws notification boxes and the like. Each of these has its own intersection detection routines, all running on the main thread. The author of the website may not even realize this is happening, since they may know very little about the inner workings of the two libraries they are using. As the user scrolls the page, these intersection detection routines are firing constantly during the scroll handling code, resulting in an experience that leaves the user frustrated with the browser, the website, and their computer.

The Intersection Observer API lets code register a callback function that is executed whenever a particular element enters or exits an intersection with another element (or the viewport), or when the intersection between two elements changes by a specified amount. This way, sites no longer need to do anything on the main thread to watch for this kind of element intersection, and the browser is free to optimize the management of intersections as it sees fit.

One thing the Intersection Observer API can't do: trigger logic based on the exact number of pixels that overlap, or specifically on which ones they are. It only solves the common use case of "If they intersect by somewhere around N%, I need to do something."

Intersection observer concepts and usage

The Intersection Observer API allows you to configure a callback that is called when either of these circumstances occur:

  • A target element intersects either the device's viewport or a specified element. That specified element is called the root element or root for the purposes of the Intersection Observer API.
  • The first time the observer is initially asked to watch a target element.

Typically, you'll want to watch for intersection changes with regard to the target element's closest scrollable ancestor, or, if the target element isn't a descendant of a scrollable element, the device's viewport. To watch for intersection relative to the device's viewport, specify null for the root option. Keep reading for a more detailed explanation about intersection observer options.

Whether you're using the viewport or some other element as the root, the API works the same way, executing a callback function you provide whenever the visibility of the target element changes so that it crosses desired amounts of intersection with the root.

The degree of intersection between the target element and its root is the intersection ratio. This is a representation of the percentage of the target element which is visible as a value between 0.0 and 1.0.

Creating an intersection observer

Create the intersection observer by calling its constructor and passing it a callback function to be run whenever a threshold is crossed in one direction or the other:

js
const options = {
  root: document.querySelector("#scrollArea"),
  rootMargin: "0px",
  threshold: 1.0,
};

const observer = new IntersectionObserver(callback, options);

A threshold of 1.0 means that when 100% of the target is visible within the element specified by the root option, the callback is invoked.

Intersection observer options

The options object passed into the IntersectionObserver() constructor let you control the circumstances under which the observer's callback is invoked. It has the following fields:

root

The element that is used as the viewport for checking visibility of the target. Must be the ancestor of the target. Defaults to the browser viewport if not specified or if null.

rootMargin

Margin around the root. Can have values similar to the CSS margin property, e.g. "10px 20px 30px 40px" (top, right, bottom, left). The values can be percentages. This set of values serves to grow or shrink each side of the root element's bounding box before computing intersections. Defaults to all zeros.

threshold

Either a single number or an array of numbers which indicate at what percentage of the target's visibility the observer's callback should be executed. If you only want to detect when visibility passes the 50% mark, you can use a value of 0.5. If you want the callback to run every time visibility passes another 25%, you would specify the array [0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1]. The default is 0 (meaning as soon as even one pixel is visible, the callback will be run). A value of 1.0 means that the threshold isn't considered passed until every pixel is visible.

Intersection change callbacks

The callback passed to the IntersectionObserver() constructor receives a list of IntersectionObserverEntry objects and the observer:

js
const callback = (entries, observer) => {
  entries.forEach((entry) => {
    // Each entry describes an intersection change for one observed
    // target element:
    //   entry.boundingClientRect
    //   entry.intersectionRatio
    //   entry.intersectionRect
    //   entry.isIntersecting
    //   entry.rootBounds
    //   entry.target
    //   entry.time
  });
};

The list of entries received by the callback includes one entry for each threshold-crossing event — multiple entries can be received at a time, either from multiple targets or from a single target crossing multiple thresholds in a short amount of time. The entries are dispatched using a queue, so they should be ordered by the time they were generated, but you should preferably use IntersectionObserverEntry.time to correctly order them.

Each entry in the list of thresholds is an IntersectionObserverEntry object describing one threshold that was crossed; that is, each entry describes how much of a given element is intersecting with the root element, whether or not the element is considered to be intersecting or not, etc. The entry only contains information about that particular instant — if you want information that requires tracking over time, such as the scroll direction and speed, you may need to compute that yourself by memorizing previously received entries.

Be aware that your callback is executed on the main thread. It should operate as quickly as possible; if anything time-consuming needs to be done, use Window.requestIdleCallback().

The code snippet below shows a callback which keeps a counter of how many times elements transition from not intersecting the root to intersecting by at least 75%. For a threshold value of 0.0 (default) the callback is called approximately upon transition of the boolean value of isIntersecting. The snippet thus first checks that the transition is a positive one, then determines whether intersectionRatio is above 75%, in which case it increments the counter.

js
const intersectionCallback = (entries) => {
  entries.forEach((entry) => {
    if (entry.isIntersecting) {
      let elem = entry.target;

      if (entry.intersectionRatio >= 0.75) {
        intersectionCounter++;
      }
    }
  });
};

Targeting an element to be observed

Once you have created the observer, you need to give it a target element to watch:

js
const target = document.querySelector("#listItem");
observer.observe(target);

// the callback we set up for the observer will be executed now for the first time
// it waits until we assign a target to our observer (even if the target is currently not visible)

Whenever the target meets a threshold specified for the IntersectionObserver, the callback is invoked.

Also, note that if you specified the root option, the target must be a descendant of the root element.

How intersection is calculated

All areas considered by the Intersection Observer API are rectangles; elements which are irregularly shaped are considered as occupying the smallest rectangle which encloses all of the element's parts. Similarly, if the visible portion of an element is not rectangular, the element's intersection rectangle is considered to be the smallest rectangle that contains all the visible portions of the element.

It's useful to understand a bit about how the various properties provided by IntersectionObserverEntry describe an intersection.

The intersection root and root margin

Before we can track the intersection of an element with a container, we need to know what that container is. That container is the intersection root, or root element. This can be either a specific element in the document which is an ancestor of the element to be observed, or null to use the document's viewport as the container.

The root intersection rectangle is the rectangle used to check against the target or targets. This rectangle is determined like this:

  • If the intersection root is the implicit root (that is, the top-level Document), the root intersection rectangle is the viewport's rectangle.
  • If the intersection root has an overflow clip, the root intersection rectangle is the root element's content area.
  • Otherwise, the root intersection rectangle is the intersection root's bounding client rectangle (as returned by calling getBoundingClientRect() on it).

The root intersection rectangle can be adjusted further by setting the root margin, rootMargin, when creating the IntersectionObserver. The values in rootMargin define offsets added to each side of the intersection root's bounding box to create the final intersection root bounds (which are disclosed in IntersectionObserverEntry.rootBounds when the callback is executed). Positive values grow the box, while negative values shrink it.

In the example below, we have a scrollable box and an element that's initially out of view. You can adjust the root right margin, and see that:

  • If the margin is negative, then even when the red element starts to become visible, it's still not considered intersecting with the root because the root's bounding box is shrunk.
  • If the margin is positive, the red element is considered intersecting with the root even if it's not visible, because it's intersecting with the root's margin area.

Thresholds

Rather than reporting every infinitesimal change in how much a target element is visible, the Intersection Observer API uses thresholds. When you create an observer, you can provide one or more numeric values representing percentages of the target element which are visible. Then, the API only reports changes to visibility which cross these thresholds.

For example, if you want to be informed every time a target's visibility passes backward or forward through each 25% mark, you would specify the array [0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1] as the list of thresholds when creating the observer.

When the callback is invoked, it receives a list of IntersectionObserverEntry objects, one for each observed target which has had the degree to which it intersects the root change such that the amount exposed crosses over one of the thresholds, in either direction.

You can see if the target currently intersects the root by looking at the entry's isIntersecting property; if its value is true, the target is at least partially intersecting the root element or document. This lets you determine whether the entry represents a transition from the elements intersecting to no longer intersecting or a transition from not intersecting to intersecting.

Note that it's possible to have a zero intersection rectangle, which can happen if the intersection is exactly along the boundary between the two or the area of boundingClientRect is zero. This state of the target and root sharing a boundary line is not considered enough to be considered transitioning into an intersecting state.

To get a feeling for how thresholds work, try scrolling the box below around. Each colored box within it displays the percentage of itself that's visible in all four of its corners, so you can see these ratios change over time as you scroll the container. Each box has a different set of thresholds:

  • The first box has a threshold for each percentage point of visibility; that is, the IntersectionObserver.thresholds array is [0.00, 0.01, 0.02, /*…,*/ 0.99, 1.00].
  • The second box has a single threshold, at the 50% mark.
  • The third box has thresholds every 10% of visibility (0%, 10%, 20%, etc.).
  • The last box has thresholds each 25%.

Clipping and the intersection rectangle

The browser computes the final intersection rectangle as follows; this is all done for you, but it can be helpful to understand these steps in order to better grasp exactly when intersections will occur.

  1. The target element's bounding rectangle (that is, the smallest rectangle that fully encloses the bounding boxes of every component that makes up the element) is obtained by calling getBoundingClientRect() on the target. This is the largest the intersection rectangle may be. The remaining steps will remove any portions that don't intersect.
  2. Starting at the target's immediate parent block and moving outward, each containing block's clipping (if any) is applied to the intersection rectangle. A block's clipping is determined based on the intersection of the two blocks and the clipping mode (if any) specified by the overflow property. Setting overflow to anything but visible causes clipping to occur.
  3. If one of the containing elements is the root of a nested browsing context (such as the document contained in an <iframe>), the intersection rectangle is clipped to the containing context's viewport, and recursion upward through the containers continues with the container's containing block. So if the top level of an <iframe> is reached, the intersection rectangle is clipped to the frame's viewport, then the frame's parent element is the next block recursed through toward the intersection root.
  4. When recursion upward reaches the intersection root, the resulting rectangle is mapped to the intersection root's coordinate space.
  5. The resulting rectangle is then updated by intersecting it with the root intersection rectangle.
  6. This rectangle is, finally, mapped to the coordinate space of the target's document.

Interfaces

IntersectionObserver

The primary interface for the Intersection Observer API. Provides methods for creating and managing an observer which can watch any number of target elements for the same intersection configuration. Each observer can asynchronously observe changes in the intersection between one or more target elements and a shared ancestor element or with their top-level Document's viewport. The ancestor or viewport is referred to as the root.

IntersectionObserverEntry

Describes the intersection between the target element and its root container at a specific moment of transition. Objects of this type can only be obtained in two ways: as an input to your IntersectionObserver callback, or by calling IntersectionObserver.takeRecords().

A simple example

This simple example causes a target element to change its color and transparency as it becomes more or less visible. At Timing element visibility with the Intersection Observer API, you can find a more extensive example showing how to time how long a set of elements (such as ads) are visible to the user and to react to that information by recording statistics or by updating elements.

HTML

The HTML for this example is very short, with a primary element which is the box that we'll be targeting (with the creative ID "box") and some contents within the box.

html
<div id="box">
  <div class="vertical">Welcome to <strong>The Box!</strong></div>
</div>

CSS

The CSS isn't terribly important for the purposes of this example; it lays out the element and establishes that the background-color and border attributes can participate in CSS transitions, which we'll use to affect the changes to the element as it becomes more or less obscured.

css
#box {
  background-color: rgb(40 40 190 / 100%);
  border: 4px solid rgb(20 20 120);
  transition:
    background-color 1s,
    border 1s;
  width: 350px;
  height: 350px;
  display: flex;
  align-items: center;
  justify-content: center;
  padding: 20px;
}

.vertical {
  color: white;
  font: 32px "Arial";
}

.extra {
  width: 350px;
  height: 350px;
  margin-top: 10px;
  border: 4px solid rgb(20 20 120);
  text-align: center;
  padding: 20px;
}

JavaScript

Finally, let's take a look at the JavaScript code that uses the Intersection Observer API to make things happen.

Setting up

First, we need to prepare some variables and install the observer.

js
const numSteps = 20.0;

let boxElement;
let prevRatio = 0.0;
let increasingColor = "rgb(40 40 190 / ratio)";
let decreasingColor = "rgb(190 40 40 / ratio)";

// Set things up
window.addEventListener(
  "load",
  (event) => {
    boxElement = document.querySelector("#box");

    createObserver();
  },
  false,
);

The constants and variables we set up here are:

numSteps

A constant which indicates how many thresholds we want to have between a visibility ratio of 0.0 and 1.0.

prevRatio

This variable will be used to record what the visibility ratio was the last time a threshold was crossed; this will let us figure out whether the target element is becoming more or less visible.

increasingColor

A string defining a color we'll apply to the target element when the visibility ratio is increasing. The word "ratio" in this string will be replaced with the target's current visibility ratio, so that the element not only changes color but also becomes increasingly opaque as it becomes less obscured.

decreasingColor

Similarly, this is a string defining a color we'll apply when the visibility ratio is decreasing.

We call Window.addEventListener() to start listening for the load event; once the page has finished loading, we get a reference to the element with the ID "box" using querySelector(), then call the createObserver() method we'll create in a moment to handle building and installing the intersection observer.

Creating the intersection observer

The createObserver() method is called once page load is complete to handle actually creating the new IntersectionObserver and starting the process of observing the target element.

js
function createObserver() {
  let observer;

  let options = {
    root: null,
    rootMargin: "0px",
    threshold: buildThresholdList(),
  };

  observer = new IntersectionObserver(handleIntersect, options);
  observer.observe(boxElement);
}

This begins by setting up an options object containing the settings for the observer. We want to watch for changes in visibility of the target element relative to the document's viewport, so root is null. We need no margin, so the margin offset, rootMargin, is specified as "0px". This causes the observer to watch for changes in the intersection between the target element's bounds and those of the viewport, without any added (or subtracted) space.

The list of visibility ratio thresholds, threshold, is constructed by the function buildThresholdList(). The threshold list is built programmatically in this example since there are a number of them and the number is intended to be adjustable.

Once options is ready, we create the new observer, calling the IntersectionObserver() constructor, specifying a function to be called when intersection crosses one of our thresholds, handleIntersect(), and our set of options. We then call observe() on the returned observer, passing into it the desired target element.

We could opt to monitor multiple elements for visibility intersection changes with respect to the viewport by calling observer.observe() for each of those elements, if we wanted to do so.

Building the array of threshold ratios

The buildThresholdList() function, which builds the list of thresholds, looks like this:

js
function buildThresholdList() {
  let thresholds = [];
  let numSteps = 20;

  for (let i = 1.0; i <= numSteps; i++) {
    let ratio = i / numSteps;
    thresholds.push(ratio);
  }

  thresholds.push(0);
  return thresholds;
}

This builds the array of thresholds—each of which is a ratio between 0.0 and 1.0, by pushing the value i/numSteps onto the thresholds array for each integer i between 1 and numSteps. It also pushes 0 to include that value. The result, given the default value of numSteps (20), is the following list of thresholds:

# Ratio # Ratio
0 0.05 11 0.6
1 0.1 12 0.65
2 0.15 13 0.7
3 0.2 14 0.75
4 0.25 15 0.8
5 0.3 16 0.85
6 0.35 17 0.9
7 0.4 18 0.95
8 0.45 19 1
9 0.5 20 0
10 0.55

We could, of course, hard-code the array of thresholds into our code, and often that's what you'll end up doing. But this example leaves room for adding configuration controls to adjust the granularity, for example.

Handling intersection changes

When the browser detects that the target element (in our case, the one with the ID "box") has been unveiled or obscured such that its visibility ratio crosses one of the thresholds in our list, it calls our handler function, handleIntersect():

js
function handleIntersect(entries, observer) {
  entries.forEach((entry) => {
    if (entry.intersectionRatio > prevRatio) {
      entry.target.style.backgroundColor = increasingColor.replace(
        "ratio",
        entry.intersectionRatio,
      );
    } else {
      entry.target.style.backgroundColor = decreasingColor.replace(
        "ratio",
        entry.intersectionRatio,
      );
    }

    prevRatio = entry.intersectionRatio;
  });
}

For each IntersectionObserverEntry in the list entries, we look to see if the entry's intersectionRatio is going up; if it is, we set the target's background-color to the string in increasingColor (remember, it's "rgb(40 40 190 / ratio)"), replaces the word "ratio" with the entry's intersectionRatio. The result: not only does the color get changed, but the transparency of the target element changes, too; as the intersection ratio goes down, the background color's alpha value goes down with it, resulting in an element that's more transparent.

Similarly, if the intersectionRatio is going down, we use the string decreasingColor and replace the word "ratio" in that with the intersectionRatio before setting the target element's background-color.

Finally, in order to track whether the intersection ratio is going up or down, we remember the current ratio in the variable prevRatio.

Result

Below is the resulting content. Scroll this page up and down and notice how the appearance of the box changes as you do so.

There's an even more extensive example at Timing element visibility with the Intersection Observer API.

Specifications

Specification
Intersection Observer
# intersection-observer-interface

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also