<header>: The Header 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.
The <header>
HTML element represents introductory content, typically a group of introductory or navigational aids. It may contain some heading elements but also a logo, a search form, an author name, and other elements.
Try it
<header> <a class="logo" href="#">Cute Puppies Express!</a> </header> <article> <header> <h1>Beagles</h1> <time>08.12.2014</time> </header> <p> I love beagles <em>so</em> much! Like, really, a lot. They’re adorable and their ears are so, so snugly soft! </p> </article>
.logo { background: left / cover url("/shared-assets/images/examples/puppy-header.jpg"); display: flex; height: 120px; align-items: center; justify-content: center; font: bold calc(1em + 2 * (100vw - 120px) / 100) "Dancing Script", fantasy; color: #ff0083; text-shadow: #000 2px 2px 0.2rem; } header > h1 { margin-bottom: 0; } header > time { font: italic 0.7rem sans-serif; }
Usage notes
The <header>
element has an identical meaning to the site-wide banner
landmark role, unless nested within sectioning content. Then, the <header>
element is not a landmark.
The <header>
element can define a global site header, described as a banner
in the accessibility tree. It usually includes a logo, company name, search feature, and possibly the global navigation or a slogan. It is generally located at the top of the page.
Otherwise, it is a section
in the accessibility tree, and usually contains the surrounding section's heading (an h1
– h6
element) and optional subheading, but this is not required.
Historical Usage
The <header>
element originally existed at the very beginning of HTML for headings. It is seen in the very first website. At some point, headings became <h1>
through <h6>
, allowing <header>
to be free to fill a different role.
Attributes
This element only includes the global attributes.
Accessibility
Examples
Page Header
<header> <h1>Main Page Title</h1> <img src="mdn-logo-sm.png" alt="MDN logo" /> </header>
Result
Article Header
<article> <header> <h2>The Planet Earth</h2> <p> Posted on Wednesday, <time datetime="2017-10-04">4 October 2017</time> by Jane Smith </p> </header> <p> We live on a planet that's blue and green, with so many things still unseen. </p> <p><a href="https://example.com/the-planet-earth/">Continue reading…</a></p> </article>
Result
Technical summary
Content categories | Flow content, palpable content. |
---|---|
Permitted content | Flow content, but with no <header> or <footer> descendant. |
Tag omission | None, both the starting and ending tag are mandatory. |
Permitted parents | Any element that accepts flow content. Note that a <header> element must not be a descendant of an <address> , <footer> or another <header> element. |
Implicit ARIA role | banner, or generic if a descendant of an article , aside , main , nav or section element, or an element with article , complementary , main , navigation or region role |
Permitted ARIA roles | group , presentation or none |
DOM interface | HTMLElement |
Specifications
Specification |
---|
HTML # the-header-element |