4240

Chrome supports the placeholder attribute on input[type=text] elements (others probably do too).

But the following CSS doesn't do anything to the placeholder's value:

input[placeholder], [placeholder], *[placeholder] {
    color: red !important;
}
<input type="text" placeholder="Value">

But Value will still remain grey instead of red.

Is there a way to change the color of the placeholder text?

corn on the cob
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David Murdoch
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    Quick heads-up (not a solution, just a FYI): if I recall correctly, input[placeholder] just matches tags that have a placeholder attribute, it doesn't match the placeholder attribute itself. – pinkgothic Apr 09 '10 at 19:58
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    Yah, the thought crossed my mind that this may be like trying to style an element's "title" attribute. So +1 for thinking alike! – David Murdoch Apr 09 '10 at 20:01
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    @MathiasBynens _The :placeholder-shown pseudo-class matches an input element that is showing such placeholder text._ So it matches `` tag, like `input` selector, but showing placeholder text just now. It also doesn't match the placeholder attribute itself. – HEX Jan 18 '16 at 12:55
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    @HEX It’s not like the `input` selector because that selects all `input` elements. `:placeholder-shown` only selects `input` elements that are currently showing the placeholder, allowing you to style those elements only, and effectively style the placeholder text. What are you trying to say? – Mathias Bynens Jan 19 '16 at 14:19
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    @HEX (Of course, it also selected `textarea` elements that are showing placeholder text.) – Mathias Bynens Jan 21 '16 at 10:18
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    I can see no problem here ... The placeholder's text color is now red. Maybe other modern browsers now support it. – Lloyd Dominic May 24 '17 at 05:28
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    Since this is a **hot topic**, I came up with another approach, to [___simulate a placeholder___](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/44333727/simulation-of-a-placeholder/44333787#44333787), which might be of interest – Asons Jun 02 '17 at 18:30
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    The provided code works on FireFox. – shreyasm-dev Jun 25 '20 at 00:39

44 Answers44

5022

Implementation

There are three different implementations: pseudo-elements, pseudo-classes, and nothing.

  • WebKit, Blink (Safari, Google Chrome, Opera 15+) and Microsoft Edge are using a pseudo-element: ::-webkit-input-placeholder. [Ref]
  • Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 is using a pseudo-class: :-moz-placeholder (one colon). [Ref]
  • Mozilla Firefox 19+ is using a pseudo-element: ::-moz-placeholder, but the old selector will still work for a while. [Ref]
  • Internet Explorer 10 and 11 are using a pseudo-class: :-ms-input-placeholder. [Ref]
  • April 2017: Most modern browsers support the simple pseudo-element ::placeholder [Ref]

Internet Explorer 9 and lower does not support the placeholder attribute at all, while Opera 12 and lower do not support any CSS selector for placeholders.

The discussion about the best implementation is still going on. Note the pseudo-elements act like real elements in the Shadow DOM. A padding on an input will not get the same background color as the pseudo-element.

CSS selectors

User agents are required to ignore a rule with an unknown selector. See Selectors Level 3:

a group of selectors containing an invalid selector is invalid.

So we need separate rules for each browser. Otherwise the whole group would be ignored by all browsers.

::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* WebKit, Blink, Edge */
    color:    #909;
}
:-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 */
   color:    #909;
   opacity:  1;
}
::-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */
   color:    #909;
   opacity:  1;
}
:-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
   color:    #909;
}
::-ms-input-placeholder { /* Microsoft Edge */
   color:    #909;
}

::placeholder { /* Most modern browsers support this now. */
   color:    #909;
}
<input placeholder="Stack Snippets are awesome!">

Usage notes

  • Be careful to avoid bad contrasts. Firefox's placeholder appears to be defaulting with a reduced opacity, so needs to use opacity: 1 here.
  • Note that placeholder text is just cut off if it doesn’t fit – size your input elements in em and test them with big minimum font size settings. Don’t forget translations: some languages need more room for the same word.
  • Browsers with HTML support for placeholder but without CSS support for that (like Opera) should be tested too.
  • Some browsers use additional default CSS for some input types (email, search). These might affect the rendering in unexpected ways. Use the properties -webkit-appearance and -moz-appearance to change that. Example:
    [type="search"] {
        -moz-appearance:    textfield;
        -webkit-appearance: textfield;
        appearance: textfield;
    }
hitautodestruct
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fuxia
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769

/* do not group these rules */
*::-webkit-input-placeholder {
    color: red;
}
*:-moz-placeholder {
    /* FF 4-18 */
    color: red;
    opacity: 1;
}
*::-moz-placeholder {
    /* FF 19+ */
    color: red;
    opacity: 1;
}
*:-ms-input-placeholder {
    /* IE 10+ */
    color: red;
}
*::-ms-input-placeholder {
    /* Microsoft Edge */
    color: red;
}
*::placeholder {
    /* modern browser */
    color: red;
}
<input placeholder="hello"/> <br />
<textarea placeholder="hello"></textarea>

This will style all input and textarea placeholders.

Important Note: Do not group these rules. Instead, make a separate rule for every selector (one invalid selector in a group makes the whole group invalid).

RiZKiT
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brillout
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310

You may also want to style textareas:

input::-webkit-input-placeholder,
textarea::-webkit-input-placeholder {
  color: #FF9900;
}

input:-moz-placeholder,
textarea:-moz-placeholder {
  color: #FF9900;
}
<textarea rows="4" cols="50" placeholder="Stack Snippets are nice!">
</textarea>
Lars Flieger
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Matt
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120

For Bootstrap and Less users, there is a mixin .placeholder:

// Placeholder text
// -------------------------
.placeholder(@color: @placeholderText) {
  &:-moz-placeholder {
    color: @color;
  }
  &:-ms-input-placeholder {
    color: @color;
  }
  &::-webkit-input-placeholder {
    color: @color;
  }
}
Peter Mortensen
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EIIPII
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111

In addition to toscho's answer I've noticed some webkit inconsistencies between Chrome 9-10 and Safari 5 with the CSS properties supported that are worth noting.

Specifically Chrome 9 and 10 do not support background-color, border, text-decoration and text-transform when styling the placeholder.

The full cross-browser comparison is here.

ajcw
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87

For Sass users:

// Create placeholder mixin
@mixin placeholder($color, $size:"") {
  &::-webkit-input-placeholder {
    color: $color;
    @if $size != "" {
      font-size: $size;
    }
  }
  &:-moz-placeholder {
    color: $color;
    @if $size != "" {
      font-size: $size;
    }
  }
  &::-moz-placeholder {
    color: $color;
    @if $size != "" {
      font-size: $size;
    }
  }
  &:-ms-input-placeholder {
    color: $color;
    @if $size != "" {
      font-size: $size;
    }
  }
}

// Use placeholder mixin (the size parameter is optional)
[placeholder] {
  @include placeholder(red, 10px);
}
Peter Mortensen
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Konst_
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70

This will work fine. DEMO HERE:

input::-webkit-input-placeholder,
textarea::-webkit-input-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
input:-moz-placeholder,
textarea:-moz-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
input::-moz-placeholder,
textarea::-moz-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
input:-ms-input-placeholder,
textarea:-ms-input-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
<input type="text" placeholder="Value" />
Love Trivedi
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56

In Firefox and Internet Explorer, the normal input text color overrides the color property of placeholders. So, we need to

::-webkit-input-placeholder { 
    color: red; text-overflow: ellipsis; 
}
:-moz-placeholder { 
    color: #acacac !important; text-overflow: ellipsis; 
}
::-moz-placeholder { 
    color: #acacac !important; text-overflow: ellipsis; 
} /* For the future */
:-ms-input-placeholder { 
    color: #acacac !important; text-overflow: ellipsis; 
}
Peter Mortensen
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Dionysios Arvanitis
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51

Use the new ::placeholder if you use autoprefixer.

Note that the .placeholder mixin from Bootstrap is deprecated in favor of this.

Example:

input::placeholder { color: black; }

When using autoprefixer the above will be converted to the correct code for all browsers.

hitautodestruct
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Mike Jerred
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43

Cross-browser solution:

/* all elements */
::-webkit-input-placeholder { color:#f00; }
::-moz-placeholder { color:#f00; } /* firefox 19+ */
:-ms-input-placeholder { color:#f00; } /* ie */
input:-moz-placeholder { color:#f00; }

/* individual elements: webkit */
#field2::-webkit-input-placeholder { color:#00f; }
#field3::-webkit-input-placeholder { color:#090; background:lightgreen; text-transform:uppercase; }
#field4::-webkit-input-placeholder { font-style:italic; text-decoration:overline; letter-spacing:3px; color:#999; }

/* individual elements: mozilla */
#field2::-moz-placeholder { color:#00f; }
#field3::-moz-placeholder { color:#090; background:lightgreen; text-transform:uppercase; }
#field4::-moz-placeholder { font-style:italic; text-decoration:overline; letter-spacing:3px; color:#999; }

Credit: David Walsh

Kristian
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42

Now we have a standard way to apply CSS to an input's placeholder : ::placeholder pseudo-element from this CSS Module Level 4 Draft.

Alexander O'Mara
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user3790069
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  • This works in Firefox 51. I'm just going to use this method; the other browsers will catch up soon enough for me (given that no functionality is broken if the to-be-standard style is not applied). – Lonnie Best Feb 27 '17 at 08:39
39

I just realize something for Mozilla Firefox 19+ that the browser gives an opacity value for the placeholder, so the color will not be what you really want.

input::-webkit-input-placeholder, textarea::-webkit-input-placeholder {
    color: #eee; opacity:1;
}
input:-moz-placeholder, textarea:-moz-placeholder {
    color: #eee; opacity:1;
}
input::-moz-placeholder, textarea::-moz-placeholder {
    color: #eee; opacity:1;
}
input:-ms-input-placeholder, textarea:-ms-input-placeholder {
    color: #eee; opacity:1;
}

I overwrite the opacity for 1, so it will be good to go.

Alexander van Oostenrijk
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Burak Tokak
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37

I don't remember where I've found this code snippet on the Internet (it wasn't written by me, don't remember where I've found it, nor who wrote it).

$('[placeholder]').focus(function() {
        var input = $(this);
        if (input.val() == input.attr('placeholder')) {
            input.val('');
            input.removeClass('placeholder');
        }
    }).blur(function() {
        var input = $(this);
        if (input.val() == '' || input.val() == input.attr('placeholder')) {
            input.addClass('placeholder');
            input.val(input.attr('placeholder'));
        }
    }).blur();
    $('[placeholder]').parents('form').submit(function() {
        $(this).find('[placeholder]').each(function() {
            var input = $(this);
            if (input.val() == input.attr('placeholder')) {
                input.val('');
            }
        })
    });

Just load this JavaScript code and then edit your placeholder with CSS by calling this rule:

form .placeholder {
   color: #222;
   font-size: 25px;
   /* etc. */
}
Peter Mortensen
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Dragos Rizescu
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    This is the old way of doing it, which I've used quite a bit. The disadvantage is that the placeholder text disappears when you focus. I've found this to be annoying when the UI doesn't also include labels next to the input. Over the past several months I've started replacing this method with using placeholder text, which I think is a UX improvement. – Redtopia Dec 10 '13 at 19:31
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    The other problem with code like this is your serverside code has to deal with placeholder text as empty input, which has problems with edge cases where you want to enter a town called "Town". Instead of checking values against the placeholder text you should really use a data-modified flag on the input, and then clear the input on form submit if the flag is not set. And for AJAX interfaces you may not even have a form, so you should be able to associate an arbitrary submission event with the input. This is one of those really simple situations that isn't. – Whelkaholism Mar 07 '14 at 13:16
37

I think this code will work because a placeholder is needed only for input type text. So this one line CSS will be enough for your need:

input[type="text"]::-webkit-input-placeholder {
    color: red;
}
Peter Mortensen
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Alias Varghese
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  • Don't use this one anymore. There are several more elements with placeholder and more prefixes. See solutions above or use `::placeholder` together with autoprefixer. – RiZKiT Jul 19 '18 at 15:21
36

For Bootstrap users, if you are using class="form-control", there may be a CSS specificity issue. You should get a higher priority:

.form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder {
    color: red;
}
//.. and other browsers

Or if you are using Less:

.form-control{
    .placeholder(red);
}
Peter Mortensen
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gfaceless
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20

How about this

<input type="text" value="placeholder text" onfocus="this.style.color='#000'; 
    this.value='';" style="color: #f00;" />

No CSS or placeholder, but you get the same functionality.

Mobarak Ali
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user1729061
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    what happens if someone clicks again after writing something.. the original text they wrote will be gone! – Lucky Soni May 02 '13 at 10:04
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    @LuckySoni you _could_ do this, but I personally prefer the first one. `` – user1729061 May 18 '13 at 18:25
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    Even your second version doesn't provide the same functionality. If the user submits the ``
    `` with this input the placeholder text will be sent to the server. I seen so many sites do this wrong.
    – lqc May 30 '13 at 08:35
  • This is dangerous! If you come back again to the form you lost everything! – Mobarak Ali May 15 '19 at 15:10
20

If you are using Bootstrap and couldn't get this working then probably you missed the fact that Bootstrap itself adds these selectors. This is Bootstrap v3.3 we are talking about.

If you are trying to change the placeholder inside a .form-control CSS class then you should override it like this:

.form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* WebKit, Blink, Edge */
    color:    #777;
}
.form-control:-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 */
    color:    #777;
    opacity:  1;
}
.form-control::-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */
    color:    #777;
    opacity:  1;
}
.form-control:-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
    color:    #777;
}
Peter Mortensen
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mansoor.khan
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19

This short and clean code:

::-webkit-input-placeholder {color: red;}
:-moz-placeholder           {color: red; /* For Firefox 18- */}
::-moz-placeholder          {color: red; /* For Firefox 19+ */}
:-ms-input-placeholder      {color: red;}
Alexander van Oostenrijk
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Banti Mathur
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16

I have tried every combination here to change the color, on my mobile platform, and eventually it was:

-webkit-text-fill-color: red;

which did the trick.

Peter Mortensen
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aviram83
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    `This property allows you to specify a fill color for text. If it is not set, then the color property will be used to do the fill.` It sounds to me like you've got some other CSS rule that is setting the `color` property. – David Murdoch Aug 05 '15 at 10:25
11

Adding an actual very nice and simple possibility: CSS filters!

enter image description here

enter image description here

enter image description here

It will style everything, including the placeholder.

The following will set both input elements on the same palette, using the hue filter for color changes. It render very well now in browsers (except ie...)

input {
  filter: sepia(100%) saturate(400%) grayscale(0) contrast(200%) hue-rotate(68deg) invert(18%);
}
<input placeholder="Hello world!" />
<input type="date" /><br>
<input type="range" />
<input type="color" />

To allow users to change it dynamically, using an input type color for changes, or to find nuances, check out this snippet:

From: Codepen

function stylElem() {
  stylo.dataset.hue = ((parseInt(stylo.value.substring(1), 16))/46666).toFixed(0)
  Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('input, audio, video')).forEach(function(e){
      e.style.cssText += ";filter:sepia(100%) saturate(400%)grayscale(0)contrast(200%)hue-rotate("+ stylo.dataset.hue+"deg)invert("+(stylo.dataset.hue/3.6)+"%)"
  out.innerText = e.style.cssText
})()}

stylElem()
body {background: black; color: white}
Choose a color!
<input type="color" id="stylo" oninput="stylElem()">
<br>
<div id="out"></div> <p>
  <input placeholder="Hello world!" />
  <input type="date" /><br>
  <input type="range" />
 <br>
<audio controls src="#"></audio> <br><br> 
<video controls src="#"></video>

Css filters docs: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/filter

NVRM
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9

For SASS/SCSS user using Bourbon, it has a built-in function.

//main.scss
@import 'bourbon';

input {
  width: 300px;

  @include placeholder {
    color: red;
  }
}

CSS Output, you can also grab this portion and paste into your code.

//main.css

input {
  width: 300px;
}

input::-webkit-input-placeholder {
  color: red;
}
input:-moz-placeholder {
  color: red;
}
input::-moz-placeholder {
  color: red;
}
input:-ms-input-placeholder {
  color: red;
}
trungk18
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9

try this code for different input element different style

your css selector::-webkit-input-placeholder { /*for webkit */
    color:#909090;
    opacity:1;
}
 your css selector:-moz-placeholder { /*for mozilla */
    color:#909090;
    opacity:1;
}
 your css selector:-ms-input-placeholder { /*for for internet exprolar */ 
   color:#909090;
   opacity:1;
}

example 1:

input[type="text"]::-webkit-input-placeholder { /*for webkit */
    color: red;
    opacity:1;
}
 input[type="text"]:-moz-placeholder { /*for mozilla */
    color: red;
    opacity:1;
}
 input[type="text"]:-ms-input-placeholder { /*for for internet exprolar */ 
   color: red;
   opacity:1;
}

example 2:

input[type="email"]::-webkit-input-placeholder { /*for webkit */
    color: gray;
    opacity:1;
}
 input[type="email"]:-moz-placeholder { /*for mozilla */
    color: gray;
    opacity:1;
}
 input[type="email"]:-ms-input-placeholder { /*for for internet exprolar */ 
   color: gray;
   }
Md. Abu Sayed
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6

Here is one more example:

.form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder {
  color: red;
  width: 250px;
}
h1 {
  color: red;
}
<div class="col-sm-4">
  <input class="form-control" placeholder="Enter text here.." ng-model="Email" required/>
</div>
Mahendra Kulkarni
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5

OK, placeholders behave differently in different browsers, so you need using browser prefix in your CSS to make them identical, for example Firefox gives a transparency to placeholder by default, so need to add opacity 1 to your css, plus the color, it's not a big concern most of the times, but good to have them consistent:

*::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* WebKit browsers */
    color:    #ccc;
}
*:-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox <18 */
    color:    #ccc;
    opacity:  1;
}
*::-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */
    color:    #ccc;
    opacity:  1;
}
*:-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
    color:    #ccc;
}
Alireza
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5

You can change an HTML5 input's placeholder color with CSS. If by chance, your CSS conflict, this code note working , you can use (!important) like below.

::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* WebKit, Blink, Edge */
    color:#909 !important;
}
:-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 */
   color:#909 !important;
   opacity:1 !important;
}
::-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */
   color:#909 !important;
   opacity:1 !important;
}
:-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
   color:#909 !important;
}
::-ms-input-placeholder { /* Microsoft Edge */
   color:#909 !important;
}

<input placeholder="Stack Snippets are awesome!">

Hope this will help.

Aftab H.
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Deepak Kumar
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4

You can use this for input and focus style:

input::-webkit-input-placeholder  { color:#666;}
input:-moz-placeholder  { color:#666;}
input::-moz-placeholder { color:#666;}
input:-ms-input-placeholder  { color:#666;}
/* focus */
input:focus::-webkit-input-placeholder { color:#eee; }
input:focus:-moz-placeholder { color:#eee } /* FF 4-18 */
input:focus::-moz-placeholder { color:#eee } /* FF 19+ */
input:focus:-ms-input-placeholder { color:#eee } /* IE 10+ */
Khosravi.em
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4

Here is the solution with CSS selectors

::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* WebKit, Blink, Edge */
    color:    #909;
}
:-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 */
   color:    #909;
   opacity:  1;
}
::-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */
   color:    #909;
   opacity:  1;
}
::-ms-input-placeholder { /* Microsoft Edge */
   color:    #909;
}
:-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
   color:    #909;
}
  • WebKit, Blink (Safari, Google Chrome, Opera 15+) and Microsoft Edge are using a pseudo-element:
    ::-webkit-input-placeholder.
  • Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 is using a pseudo-class:
    :-moz-placeholder (one colon).
    Mozilla Firefox 19+ is using a pseudo-element:
    ::-moz-placeholder, but the old selector will still work for a while.
  • Internet Explorer 10 and 11 are using a pseudo-class:
    :-ms-input-placeholder.
  • Internet Explorer 9 and lower does not support the placeholder attribute at all, while Opera 12 and lower do not support any CSS selector for placeholders.
Mohammad Ayoub Khan
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4

This is fine for most of the modern browsers

input::placeholder{
  color: red; // css implementation
}

Just in case if you are using SCSS

input {
  &::placeholder {
    color: red; // scss
  }
}
Ismoil Shokirov
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3

The easiest way would be:

#yourInput::placeholder {
    color: red;/*As an example*/
}
/* if that would not work, you can always try styling the attribute itself: */
#myInput[placeholder] {
    color: red;
}
codeWithMe
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2

Compass has a mixin for this out of the box.

Take your example:

<input type="text" placeholder="Value">

And in SCSS using compass:

input[type='text'] {
  @include input-placeholder {
    color: #616161;
  }
}

See docs for the input-placeholder mixin.

bendav91
  • 31
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2

A part of HTML:

 <form action="www.anything.com">
 <input type="text" name="name"
  placeholder="Enter sentence"/>
  </form>

I gonna show how to change color of expression of 'Enter sentence' by CSS:

  ::placeholder{
  color:blue;
   }
dev_cc
  • 61
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2

::placeholder{
  color: red;
}
<input type="text" placeholder="Value">

Very Simple

Upvote

Sarvesh
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2

Try this css

input::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* Chrome/Opera/Safari */
  color: #ddd;
}
input::-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 19+ */
  color: #ddd;
}
input:-ms-input-placeholder { /* IE 10+ */
  color: #ddd;
}
input:-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 18- */
  color: #ddd;
}
1

try this its working

input::placeholder 
  color:#900009;
}
Félix Paradis
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0

Try this

::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* Chrome/Opera/Safari */
  color: pink;
}
::-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 19+ */
  color: pink;
}
:-ms-input-placeholder { /* IE 10+ */
  color: pink;
}
:-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 18- */
  color: pink;
}
aphoe
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  • 29
0

Use this CSS code for all Browser works:

 ::placeholder{color:#ccc;}

  **HTML**

 <input class="form-control" placeholder="write Here..">
0
input::-webkit-input-placeholder,
textarea::-webkit-input-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
input:-moz-placeholder,
textarea:-moz-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
input::-moz-placeholder,
textarea::-moz-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}
input:-ms-input-placeholder,
textarea:-ms-input-placeholder {
  color: #666;
}

html

<input type="text" placeholder="Value" />

107

In addition to toscho's answer I've noticed some webkit inconsistencies between Chrome 9-10 and Safari 5 with the CSS properties supported that are worth noting.

Specifically Chrome 9 and 10 do not support background-color, border, text-decoration and text-transform when styling the placeholder.

The full cross-browser comparison is here.

Biswajit Paloi
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0

 input::placeholder{ color: red; }
<input type="text" placeholder="value">
Suresh Suthar
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  • 3
-1

try this will help you this will work in all your fav browsers :

::-webkit-input-placeholder { 
    /* Chrome/Opera/Safari */
      color: pink;
    }
    ::-moz-placeholder { 
    /* Firefox 19+ */
      color: pink;
    }

    :-moz-placeholder { 
    /* Firefox 18- */
      color: pink;
    }
Anand
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  • 1
  • 8
-1
<style>
    ::-webkit-input-placeholder { 
        color:red; 
     }
    ::-moz-placeholder { 
        color:red; 
    } /* firefox 22+ */
    :-ms-input-placeholder { 
        color:red; 
    } /* ie10,11 */
    input:-moz-placeholder { 
        color:red; 
    }
 </style>
SUNIL KUMAR E.U
  • 85
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  • 11
-1

This code will change the color of the placeholder using the ::placeholder selector.

::-webkit-input-placeholder { 
    /* Edge */
    color: red;
}

:-ms-input-placeholder { 
    /* Internet Explorer */
    color: red;
}

::placeholder {
    color: red;
}
corn on the cob
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Mohsa
  • 21
  • 1
-1
<input type="text" class="input-control" placeholder="My Input">   

Add the following CSS in your head section.

<style type="text/css">
    .input-control::placeholder { /* Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Safari 10.1+ */
                    color: red !important;
                    opacity: 1; /* Firefox */
    }
        
     .input-control:-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
                    color: red !important;
     }
        
     .input-control::-ms-input-placeholder { /* Microsoft Edge */
                    color: red !important;
     }
</style>

The following is the reference link. https://www.w3schools.com/howto/howto_css_placeholder.asp

Asraf
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-2

In the html file:

<input type="text" placeholder="placeholder" class="redPlaceHolder">

In the css file:

.redPlaceHolder{
   color: #ff0000;
}
-2

Placeholder color on specific element in different browsers.

HTML

<input class='contact' type="email" placeholder="majed@firefly.com">

CSS 

    .contact::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* Chrome/Opera/Safari */
      color: pink;
    }
    .contact::-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 19+ */
      color: pink;
    }
    .contact:-ms-input-placeholder { /* IE 10+ */
      color: pink;
    }
    .contact:-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 18- */
      color: pink;
    }
Majedur
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