:visited
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The :visited CSS pseudo-class applies once the link has been visited by the user. For privacy reasons, the styles that can be modified using this selector are very limited. The :visited pseudo-class applies only to <a> and <area> elements that have an href attribute.
Try it
p {
font-weight: bold;
}
a:visited {
color: forestgreen;
text-decoration-color: hotpink;
}
<p>Pages that you might have visited:</p>
<ul>
<li>
<a href="https://developer.mozilla.org">MDN Web Docs</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/">YouTube</a>
</li>
</ul>
<p>Pages unlikely to be in your history:</p>
<ul>
<li>
<a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/missing-1">Random MDN page</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="https://example.com/missing-1">Random Example page</a>
</li>
</ul>
Styles defined by the :visited and unvisited :link pseudo-classes can be overridden by any subsequent user-action pseudo-classes (:hover or :active) that have at least equal specificity. To style links appropriately, put the :visited rule after the :link rule but before the :hover and :active rules, as defined by the LVHA-order: :link — :visited — :hover — :active. The :visited pseudo-class and :link pseudo-class are mutually exclusive.
Privacy restrictions
For privacy reasons, browsers strictly limit which styles you can apply using this pseudo-class, and how they can be used:
- Allowable CSS properties are
color,background-color,border-color,border-bottom-color,border-left-color,border-right-color,border-top-color,column-rule-color,outline-color,text-decoration-color, andtext-emphasis-color. - Allowable SVG attributes are
fillandstroke. - The alpha component of the allowed styles will be ignored. The alpha component of the element's non-
:visitedstate will be used instead. In Firefox when the alpha component is0, the style set in:visitedwill be ignored entirely. - Although these styles can change the appearance of colors to the end user, the
window.getComputedStylemethod will lie and always return the value of the non-:visitedcolor. - The
<link>element is never matched by:visited. - DOM methods that match elements via CSS selectors — such as
querySelector()andquerySelectorAll()— will always return an "empty" result even if there are visited links in a document. For the aforementioned methods, this will benullor an emptyNodeList, respectively.
Note: For more information on these limitations and the reasons behind them, see Privacy and the :visited selector.
Syntax
:visited {
/* ... */
}
Examples
Properties that would otherwise have no color or be transparent cannot be modified with :visited. Of the properties that can be set with this pseudo-class, your browser probably has a default value for color and column-rule-color only. Thus, if you want to modify the other properties, you'll need to give them a base value outside the :visited selector.
HTML
<a href="#test-visited-link">Have you visited this link yet?</a><br />
<a href="">You've already visited this link.</a>
CSS
a {
/* Specify non-transparent defaults to certain properties,
allowing them to be styled with the :visited state */
background-color: white;
border: 1px solid white;
}
a:visited {
background-color: yellow;
border-color: hotpink;
color: hotpink;
}
Result
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| HTML> # selector-visited> |
| Selectors Level 4> # visited-pseudo> |
Browser compatibility
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See also
- Privacy and the :visited selector
- Link-related pseudo-classes:
:link,:active,:hover