<meta>: The metadata element
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.
* Some parts of this feature may have varying levels of support.
The <meta> HTML element represents metadata that cannot be represented by other HTML meta-related elements, like <base>, <link>, <script>, <style> or <title>.
The type of metadata provided by the <meta> element can be one of the following:
- If the nameattribute is set, the<meta>element provides document-level metadata, applying to the whole page.
- If the http-equivattribute is set, the<meta>element is a pragma directive, providing information equivalent to what can be given by a similarly-named HTTP header.
- If the charsetattribute is set, the<meta>element is a charset declaration, giving the character encoding in which the document is encoded.
- If the itempropattribute is set, the<meta>element provides user-defined metadata.
Attributes
This element includes the global attributes.
Note:
The attribute name has a specific meaning for the <meta> element, and the itemprop attribute must not be set on the same <meta> element that has any existing name, http-equiv or charset attributes.
- charset
- 
This attribute declares the document's character encoding. If the attribute is present, its value must be an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "utf-8", because UTF-8 is the only valid encoding for HTML5 documents.<meta>elements which declare a character encoding must be located entirely within the first 1024 bytes of the document.
- content
- 
This attribute contains the value for the http-equivornameattribute, depending on which is used.
- http-equiv
- 
Defines a pragma directive. The attribute's name, short for http-equivalent, is because all the allowed values are names of particular HTTP headers:- content-security-policy
- 
Allows page authors to define a content policy for the current page. Content policies mostly specify allowed server origins and script endpoints which help guard against cross-site scripting attacks. Also see Content-Security-Policy.
- content-type
- 
Declares the MIME type and the document's character encoding. The contentattribute must have the value"text/html; charset=utf-8"if specified. This is equivalent to a<meta>element with thecharsetattribute specified and carries the same restriction on placement within the document. Note: Can only be used in documents served with atext/html— not in documents served with an XML MIME type.Also see Content-Type.
- default-style
- 
Sets the name of the default CSS style sheet set. 
- x-ua-compatible
- 
If specified, the contentattribute must have the value"IE=edge". User agents are required to ignore this pragma.
- refresh
- 
This instruction specifies: - The number of seconds until the page should be reloaded - if the contentattribute's value is a non-negative integer.
- The number of seconds until the page should redirect to another - if the contentattribute's value is a non-negative integer followed by;url=and a valid URL.
 The timer starts when the page is completely loaded, which is after the loadandpageshowevents have both fired.Also see Refresh.Warning: Pages set with a refreshvalue run the risk of having the time interval being too short. People navigating with the aid of assistive technology such as a screen reader may be unable to read through and understand the page's content before being automatically redirected. The abrupt, unannounced updating of the page content may also be disorienting for people experiencing low vision conditions.- MDN Understanding WCAG, Guideline 2.2 explanations
- MDN Understanding WCAG, Guideline 3.2 explanations
- Understanding Success Criterion 2.2.1 | W3C Understanding WCAG 2.0
- Understanding Success Criterion 2.2.4 | W3C Understanding WCAG 2.0
- Understanding Success Criterion 3.2.5 | W3C Understanding WCAG 2.0
 
- The number of seconds until the page should be reloaded - if the 
 
- media
- 
The mediaattribute defines which media the theme color defined in thecontentattribute should be applied to. Its value is a media query, which defaults toallif the attribute is missing. This attribute is only relevant when the element'snameattribute is set totheme-color. Otherwise, it has no effect, and should not be included.
- name
- 
The nameandcontentattributes can be used together to provide document metadata in terms of name-value pairs, with thenameattribute giving the metadata name, and thecontentattribute giving the value.See standard metadata names for details about the set of standard metadata names defined in the HTML specification. 
Examples
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<!-- Redirect page after 3 seconds -->
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="3;url=https://www.mozilla.org" />
Technical summary
| Content categories | Metadata content. If the itempropattribute is present:
        flow content,
        phrasing content. | 
|---|---|
| Permitted content | None; it is a void element. | 
| Tag omission | Must have a start tag and must not have an end tag. | 
| Permitted parents | 
 | 
| Implicit ARIA role | No corresponding role | 
| Permitted ARIA roles | No rolepermitted | 
| DOM interface | HTMLMetaElement | 
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| HTML # the-meta-element | 

 
                       
                
                       
			     
			