@page

Baseline 2024

Newly available

Since December 2024, this feature works across the latest devices and browser versions. This feature might not work in older devices or browsers.

The @page at-rule is a CSS at-rule used to modify different aspects of printed pages. It targets and modifies the page's dimensions, orientation, and margins. The @page at-rule can be used to target all pages in a print-out or a subset using its various pseudo-classes.

Syntax

css
/* Targets all the pages */
@page {
  size: 8.5in 9in;
  margin-top: 4in;
}

/* Targets all even-numbered pages */
@page :left {
  margin-top: 4in;
}

/* Targets all odd-numbered pages */
@page :right {
  size: 11in;
  margin-top: 4in;
}

/* Targets all selectors with `page: wide;` set */
@page wide {
  size: a4 landscape;
}

@page {
  /* margin box at top right showing page number */
  @top-right {
    content: "Page " counter(pageNumber);
  }
}

Page properties

The @page at-rule can contain only page descriptors and margin at-rules. The following descriptors have been implemented by at least one browser:

margin

Specifies the page margins. Individual margin properties margin-top, margin-right, margin-bottom, and margin-left can also be used.

page-orientation

Specifies the orientation of the page. This does not affect the layout of the page; the rotation is applied after the layout in the output medium.

size

Specifies the target size and orientation of the page box's containing block. In the general case, where one page box is rendered onto one page sheet, it also indicates the size of the destination page sheet.

The specification mentions following CSS properties to be applicable to page boxes via @page at-rule. But these have not been supported by any user agent yet.

Remaining page properties
Feature CSS properties
bidi properties direction
background properties background-color
background-image
background-repeat
background-attachment
background-position
background
border properties border-top-width
border-right-width
border-bottom-width
border-left-width
border-width
border-top-color
border-right-color
border-bottom-color
border-left-color
border-color
border-top-style
border-right-style
border-bottom-style
border-left-style
border-short-style
border-top
border-right
border-bottom
border-left
border
counter properties counter-reset
counter-increment
color color
font properties font-family
font-size
font-style
font-variant
font-weight
font
height properties height
min-height
max-height
line height line-height
margin properties margin-top
margin-right
margin-bottom
margin-left
margin
outline properties outline-width
outline-style
outline-color
outline
padding properties padding-top
padding-right
padding-bottom
padding-left
padding
quotes quotes
text properties letter-spacing
text-align
text-decoration
text-indent
text-transform
white-space
word-spacing
visibility visibility
width properties width
min-width
max-width

Description

The @page rule defines properties of the page box. The @page at-rule can be accessed via the CSS object model interface CSSPageRule.

Note: The W3C is discussing how to handle viewport-related <length> units, vh, vw, vmin, and vmax. Meanwhile do not use them within a @page at-rule.

The @page at-rule, allows the user to assign a name to the rule, which is then called in a declaration using the page property.

page

Allows a selector to use a user defined named page

Formal syntax

@page = 
@page <page-selector-list>? { <declaration-rule-list> }

<page-selector-list> =
<page-selector>#

<page-selector> =
[ <ident-token>? <pseudo-page>* ]!

<pseudo-page> =
':' [ left | right | first | blank ]

Where the <page-body> includes:

  • page-properties
  • page-margin properties

and <pseudo-page> represents these pseudo-classes:

Margin at-rules

The margin at-rules are used inside of the @page at-rule. They each target a different section of the document printed page, styling the area of the printed page based on the property values set in the style block:

css
@page {
  @top-left {
    /* page-margin-properties */
  }
}

@top-left targets the top-left of the document and applies the changes based on the page-margin-properties set.

Other margin-at rules include:

css
@top-left-corner
@top-left
@top-center
@top-right
@top-right-corner
@bottom-left-corner
@bottom-left
@bottom-center
@bottom-right
@bottom-right-corner
@left-top
@left-middle
@left-bottom
@right-top
@right-middle
@right-bottom

Page-margin properties

The page-margin properties are the set of CSS properties can be set in any individual margin at-rule. They include:

Page-margin properties
Feature CSS properties
bidi properties direction
background properties background-color
background-image
background-repeat
background-attachment
background-position
background
border properties border-top-width
border-right-width
border-bottom-width
border-left-width
border-width
border-top-color
border-right-color
border-bottom-color
border-left-color
border-color
border-top-style
border-right-style
border-bottom-style
border-left-style
border-short-style
border-top
border-right
border-bottom
border-left
border
counter properties counter-reset
counter-increment
content content
color color
font properties font-family
font-size
font-style
font-variant
font-weight
font
height properties height
min-height
max-height
line height line-height
margin properties margin-top
margin-right
margin-bottom
margin-left
margin
outline properties outline-width
outline-style
outline-color
outline
padding properties padding-top
padding-right
padding-bottom
padding-left
padding
quotes quotes
text properties letter-spacing
text-align
text-decoration
text-indent
text-transform
white-space
word-spacing
vertical alignment vertical-align
visibility visibility
width properties width
min-width
max-width
z-index z-index

Named pages

Named pages enable performing per-page layout and adding page-breaks in a declarative manner when printing.

Named pages can be applied using the page property. This allows the user to create different page configurations for use in print layouts.

An example of this can be found on the page examples.

Examples

Using the size property to change the page orientation

This example shows how to split the <section>s into individual pages in landscape format with each page having a 20% margin when printed.

HTML

html
<button>Print Webpage</button>
<article>
  <section>
    <h2>Header</h2>
    <p>
      Lorem ipsum dolor, sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Consequatur
      facilis vitae voluptatibus odio consequuntur optio placeat? Id, nam sequi
      aut in dolorem dolores, laudantium, quasi totam ipsam aliquam quibusdam
      velit.
    </p>
  </section>
  <section>
    <h2>Header</h2>
    <p>
      Lorem ipsum dolor, sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Consequatur
      facilis vitae voluptatibus odio consequuntur optio placeat? Id, nam sequi
      aut in dolorem dolores, laudantium, quasi totam ipsam aliquam quibusdam
      velit.
    </p>
  </section>
  <section>
    <h2>Header</h2>
    <p>
      Lorem ipsum dolor, sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Consequatur
      facilis vitae voluptatibus odio consequuntur optio placeat? Id, nam sequi
      aut in dolorem dolores, laudantium, quasi totam ipsam aliquam quibusdam
      velit.
    </p>
  </section>
</article>

CSS

css
@page {
  size: landscape;
  margin: 20%;
}

section {
  page-break-after: always;
  break-after: page;
}

@media print {
  button {
    display: none;
  }
}

JavaScript

js
const button = document.querySelector("button");

button.addEventListener("click", () => {
  window.print();
});

Result

Clicking the print button will launch a print dialog with the html sections split into individual pages.

@page pseudo-class examples

Please refer to the various pseudo-classes of @page for examples.

Specifications

Specification
CSS Paged Media Module Level 3
# at-page-rule
CSS Logical Properties and Values Level 1
# page

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also