cursor
The cursor CSS property sets the type of mouse cursor, if any, to show when the mouse pointer is over an element.
Syntax
/* Keyword value */
cursor: pointer;
cursor: auto;
/* URL, with a keyword fallback */
cursor: url(hand.cur), pointer;
/* URL and coordinates, with a keyword fallback */
cursor: url(cursor1.png) 4 12, auto;
cursor: url(cursor2.png) 2 2, pointer;
/* Global values */
cursor: inherit;
cursor: initial;
cursor: revert;
cursor: unset;
The cursor property is specified as zero or more <url> values, separated by commas, followed by a single mandatory keyword value. Each <url> should point to an image file. The browser will try to load the first image specified, falling back to the next if it can't, and falling back to the keyword value if no images could be loaded (or if none were specified).
Each <url> may be optionally followed by a pair of space-separated numbers, which represent <x><y> coordinates. These will set the cursor's hotspot, relative to the top-left corner of the image.
For example, this specifies two images using <url> values, providing <x><y> coordinates for the second one, and falling back to the progress keyword value if neither image can be loaded:
cursor: url(one.svg), url(two.svg) 5 5, progress;
Values
- <url>
- 
    A url(…)or a comma separated listurl(…), url(…), …, pointing to an image file. More than oneurl()may be provided as fallbacks, in case some cursor image types are not supported. A non-URL fallback (one or more of the keyword values) must be at the end of the fallback list. See Using URL values for the cursor property for more details.
- <x>- <y>
- 
    Optional x- and y-coordinates. Two unitless nonnegative numbers less than 32. 
- Keyword values
- 
    Move your mouse over values to see their live appearance in your browser: Category CSS value Example Description General autoThe UA will determine the cursor to display based on the current context. E.g., equivalent to textwhen hovering text.default  The platform-dependent default cursor. Typically an arrow. noneNo cursor is rendered. Links & status context-menu  A context menu is available. help  Help information is available. pointer  The cursor is a pointer that indicates a link. Typically an image of a pointing hand. progress  The program is busy in the background, but the user can still interact with the interface (in contrast to wait).wait  The program is busy, and the user can't interact with the interface (in contrast to progress). Sometimes an image of an hourglass or a watch.Selection cell  The table cell or set of cells can be selected. crosshair  Cross cursor, often used to indicate selection in a bitmap. text  The text can be selected. Typically the shape of an I-beam. vertical-text  The vertical text can be selected. Typically the shape of a sideways I-beam. Drag & drop alias  An alias or shortcut is to be created. copy  Something is to be copied. move  Something is to be moved. no-drop  An item may not be dropped at the current location. 
 bug 275173: On Windows and Mac OS X,no-dropis the same asnot-allowed.not-allowed  The requested action will not be carried out. grab  Something can be grabbed (dragged to be moved). grabbing  Something is being grabbed (dragged to be moved). Resizing & scrolling all-scroll  Something can be scrolled in any direction (panned). 
 bug 275174: On Windows,all-scrollis the same asmove.col-resize  The item/column can be resized horizontally. Often rendered as arrows pointing left and right with a vertical bar separating them. row-resize  The item/row can be resized vertically. Often rendered as arrows pointing up and down with a horizontal bar separating them. n-resize  Some edge is to be moved. For example, the se-resizecursor is used when the movement starts from the south-east corner of the box.
 In some environments, an equivalent bidirectional resize cursor is shown. For example,n-resizeands-resizeare the same asns-resize.e-resize  s-resize  w-resize  ne-resize  nw-resize  se-resize  sw-resize  ew-resize  Bidirectional resize cursor. ns-resize  nesw-resize  nwse-resize  Zooming zoom-in  Something can be zoomed (magnified) in or out. zoom-out  
Usage notes
Although the specification does not define any size limitations for cursor, individual user agents may choose to do so. Cursor changes using images which are outside the size range supported by the browser will generally just be ignored.
Check the Browser compatibility table for any notes on cursor size limits.
Formal definition
| Initial value | auto | 
|---|---|
| Applies to | all elements | 
| Inherited | yes | 
| Computed value | as specified, but with url()values made absolute | 
| Animation type | discrete | 
Formal syntax
[ [ <url> [ <x> <y> ]? , ]* [ auto | default | none | context-menu | help | pointer | progress | wait | cell | crosshair | text | vertical-text | alias | copy | move | no-drop | not-allowed | e-resize | n-resize | ne-resize | nw-resize | s-resize | se-resize | sw-resize | w-resize | ew-resize | ns-resize | nesw-resize | nwse-resize | col-resize | row-resize | all-scroll | zoom-in | zoom-out | grab | grabbing ] ]
Examples
Setting cursor types
.foo {
  cursor: crosshair;
}
.bar {
  cursor: zoom-in;
}
/* A fallback keyword value is required when using a URL */
.baz {
  cursor: url("hyper.cur"), auto;
}
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| CSS Basic User Interface Module Level 4 (CSS User Interface 4) # cursor | 
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser



 
			