hyphens CSS property

Baseline Widely available *

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2023.

* Some parts of this feature may have varying levels of support.

The hyphens CSS property specifies how words should be hyphenated when text wraps across multiple lines.

Try it

hyphens: none;
hyphens: manual;
hyphens: auto;
<section id="default-example">
  <p id="example-element">An extra­ordinarily long English word!</p>
</section>
#example-element {
  border: 2px dashed #999999;
  font-size: 1.5rem;
  text-align: left;
  width: 7rem;
}

The example text "An extraordinarily long English word!" contains the hidden &shy; (soft hyphen) character: An extra&shy;ordinarily long English word!. This character is used to indicate a potential place to insert a hyphen when hyphens: manual; is specified.

Syntax

css
/* Keyword values */
hyphens: none;
hyphens: manual;
hyphens: auto;

/* Global values */
hyphens: inherit;
hyphens: initial;
hyphens: revert;
hyphens: revert-layer;
hyphens: unset;

The hyphens property is specified as a single keyword value chosen from the list below.

Values

none

Words are not broken at line breaks, even if characters inside the words suggest line break points. Lines will only wrap at whitespace.

manual

Default value. Words are broken for line-wrapping only where characters inside the word suggest line break opportunities. See Suggesting line break opportunities below for details.

auto

The browser is free to automatically break words at appropriate hyphenation points, following whatever rules it chooses. However, suggested line break opportunities (see Suggesting line break opportunities below) will override automatic break point selection when present.

Description

The hyphens property can be used to define how words should be hyphenated when text wraps across multiple lines. It can prevent hyphenation entirely, hyphenate at manually-specified points within the text, or let the browser automatically insert hyphens where appropriate.

Hyphenation rules are language-specific. In HTML, the language is determined by the lang attribute. Browsers will only hyphenate if this attribute is present and the appropriate hyphenation dictionary is available. The auto setting's behavior depends on the language being properly tagged to select the appropriate hyphenation rules.

In XML, the xml:lang attribute must be used. The specification does not define rules for how hyphenation is performed, so the exact hyphenation may vary from browser to browser.

The hyphenate-character property can be used to specify an alternative hyphenation character to use at the end of the line being broken. If you apply word-break: break-all then no hyphens are shown, even if the word breaks at a hyphenation point. If you apply text-wrap-mode: nowrap, no wrapping occurs so no hyphens will appear.

Suggesting line break opportunities

There are two Unicode characters used to manually specify potential line break points within text:

U+2010 (HYPHEN)

The "hard" hyphen character indicates a visible line break opportunity. Even if the line is not actually broken at that point, the hyphen is still rendered.

U+00AD (SHY)

An invisible, "soft" hyphen. This character is not rendered visibly; instead, it marks a place where the browser should break the word if hyphenation is necessary. In HTML, use &shy; to insert a soft hyphen.

Note: When the HTML <wbr> element leads to a line break, no hyphen is added.

Formal definition

Initial valuemanual
Applies toall elements
Inheritedyes
Computed valueas specified
Animation typediscrete

Formal syntax

hyphens = 
none |
manual |
auto

Examples

Basic example

This example demonstrates the three values of the hyphens property.

HTML

We include three <dd> elements containing the same text but with three different classes.

html
<dl>
  <dt><code>none</code>: no hyphen; overflow if needed</dt>
  <dd lang="en" class="none">An extreme&shy;ly long English word</dd>
  <dt>
    <code>manual</code>: hyphen only at &amp;hyphen; or &amp;shy; (if needed)
  </dt>
  <dd lang="en" class="manual">An extreme&shy;ly long English word</dd>
  <dt><code>auto</code>: hyphens where the algorithm decides (if needed)</dt>
  <dd lang="en" class="auto">An extreme&shy;ly long English word</dd>
</dl>

CSS

Each of the three classes is set to a different hyphens value.

css
dd {
  width: 55px;
  border: 1px solid black;
}
dd.none {
  hyphens: none;
}
dd.manual {
  hyphens: manual;
}
dd.auto {
  hyphens: auto;
}

Result

Specifications

Specification
CSS Text Module Level 3
# hyphens-property

Browser compatibility

See also