CSS Opacity / Transparency
The opacity
property specifies the opacity/transparency of an element.
Transparent Image
The opacity
property can take a value from 0.0 - 1.0. The lower
the value, the more transparent:
opacity 0.2
opacity 0.5
opacity 1
(default)
Transparent Hover Effect
The opacity
property is often used together with the :hover
selector to change the opacity on mouse-over:
Example explained
The first CSS block is similar to the code in Example 1. In addition, we have added what should happen when a user hovers over one of the images. In this case we want the image to NOT be transparent when the user hovers over it. The CSS for this is opacity:1;
.
When the mouse pointer moves away from the image, the image will be transparent again.
An example of reversed hover effect:
Transparent Box
When using the opacity
property to add transparency to the background of an element, all of its child elements
inherit the same transparency. This can make the text inside a fully transparent element hard to read:
opacity 1
opacity 0.6
opacity 0.3
opacity 0.1
Transparency using RGBA
If you do not want to apply opacity to child elements, like in our example above, use RGBA color values. The following example sets the opacity for the background color and not the text:
100% opacity
60% opacity
30% opacity
10% opacity
You learned from our CSS Colors Chapter, that you can use RGB as a color value. In addition to RGB, you can use an RGB color value with an alpha channel (RGBA) - which specifies the opacity for a color.
An RGBA color value is specified with: rgba(red, green, blue, alpha). The alpha parameter is a number between 0.0 (fully transparent) and 1.0 (fully opaque).
Tip: You will learn more about RGBA Colors in our CSS Colors Chapter.
Example
div {
background: rgba(76, 175, 80, 0.3) /* Green background with 30%
opacity */
}
Try it Yourself »
Text in Transparent Box
This is some text that is placed in the transparent box.
Example
<html>
<head>
<style>
div.background {
background: url(klematis.jpg) repeat;
border: 2px solid black;
}
div.transbox {
margin: 30px;
background-color: #ffffff;
border: 1px solid black;
opacity: 0.6;
}
div.transbox p {
margin: 5%;
font-weight: bold;
color: #000000;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div class="background">
<div class="transbox">
<p>This is some text that is placed in the transparent box.</p>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Try it Yourself »
Example explained
First, we create a <div> element (class="background") with a background image, and a border.
Then we create another <div> (class="transbox") inside the first <div>.
The <div class="transbox"> have a background color, and a border - the div is transparent.
Inside the transparent <div>, we add some text inside a <p> element.
CSS Property
Property | Description |
---|---|
opacity | Sets the opacity level for an element |