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<link>
The <link> HTML element specifies relationships between the current document and an external resource. This element is most commonly used to link to stylesheets, but is also used to establish site icons (both "favicon" style icons and icons for the home screen and apps on mobile devices) among other things.
as
: This attribute is required when rel="preload"
has been set on the <link>
element, optional when rel="modulepreload"
has been set, and otherwise should not be used.
It specifies the type of content being loaded by the <link>
, which is necessary for request matching, application of correct content security policy, and setting of correct Accept
request header.
Furthermore, rel="preload"
uses this as a signal for request prioritization.
The table below lists the valid values for this attribute and the elements or resources they apply to.
Value | Applies To |
---|---|
audio | <audio> elements |
document | <iframe> and <frame> elements |
embed | <embed> elements |
fetch | fetch, XHR Note: This value also requires <link> to contain the crossorigin attribute, see CORS-enabled fetches. |
font | CSS @font-face Note: This value also requires <link> to contain the crossorigin attribute, see CORS-enabled fetches. |
image | <img> and <picture> elements with srcset or imageset attributes, SVG <image> elements, CSS *-image rules |
object | <object> elements |
script | <script> elements, Worker importScripts |
style | <link rel=stylesheet> elements, CSS @import |
track | <track> elements |
video | <video> elements |
worker | Worker, SharedWorker |
blocking
: This attribute explicitly indicates that certain operations should be blocked on the fetching of an external resource. It must only be used when the rel
attribute contains expect
or stylesheet
keywords. The operations that are to be blocked must be a space-separated list of blocking tokens listed below.
render
: The rendering of content on the screen is blocked. crossorigin
: This enumerated attribute indicates whether CORS must be used when fetching the resource.
CORS-enabled images can be reused in the <canvas>
element without being tainted.
The allowed values are:
anonymous
: A cross-origin request (i.e., with an Origin
HTTP header) is performed, but no credential is sent (i.e., no cookie, X.509 certificate, or HTTP Basic authentication).
If the server does not give credentials to the origin site (by not setting the Access-Control-Allow-Origin
HTTP header) the resource will be tainted and its usage restricted. use-credentials
: A cross-origin request (i.e., with an Origin
HTTP header) is performed along with a credential sent (i.e., a cookie, certificate, and/or HTTP Basic authentication is performed).
If the server does not give credentials to the origin site (through Access-Control-Allow-Credentials
HTTP header), the resource will be tainted and its usage restricted. If the attribute is not present, the resource is fetched without a CORS request (i.e., without sending the Origin
HTTP header), preventing its non-tainted usage. If invalid, it is handled as if the enumerated keyword anonymous was used.
See CORS settings attributes for additional information.
disabled
: For rel="stylesheet"
only, the disabled
Boolean attribute indicates whether the described stylesheet should be loaded and applied to the document.
If disabled
is specified in the HTML when it is loaded, the stylesheet will not be loaded during page load.
Instead, the stylesheet will be loaded on-demand, if and when the disabled
attribute is changed to false
or removed.
Setting the disabled
property in the DOM causes the stylesheet to be removed from the document's Document.styleSheets
list.
fetchpriority
: Provides a hint of the relative priority to use when fetching a resource of a particular type.
Allowed values:
high
: Fetch the resource at a high priority relative to other resources of the same type. low
: Fetch the resource at a low priority relative to other resources of the same type. auto
: Don't set a preference for the fetch priority.
This is the default.
It is used if no value or an invalid value is set. See HTMLLinkElement.fetchPriority
for more information.
href
: This attribute specifies the URL of the linked resource. A URL can be absolute or relative.
hreflang
: This attribute indicates the language of the linked resource.
It is purely advisory.
Allowed values are specified by RFC 5646: Tags for Identifying Languages (also known as BCP 47).
Use this attribute only if the href
attribute is present.
imagesizes
: For rel="preload"
and as="image"
only, the imagesizes
attribute has similar syntax and semantics as the sizes
attribute that indicates to preload the appropriate resource used by an img
element with corresponding values for its srcset
and sizes
attributes.
imagesrcset
: For rel="preload"
and as="image"
only, the imagesrcset
attribute has similar syntax and semantics as the srcset
attribute that indicates to preload the appropriate resource used by an img
element with corresponding values for its srcset
and sizes
attributes.
integrity
: Contains inline metadata — a base64-encoded cryptographic hash of the resource (file) you're telling the browser to fetch.
The browser can use this to verify that the fetched resource has been delivered without unexpected manipulation.
The attribute must only be specified when the rel
attribute is specified to stylesheet
, preload
, or modulepreload
.
See Subresource Integrity.
media
: This attribute specifies the media that the linked resource applies to. Its value must be a media type / media query.
This attribute is mainly useful when linking to external stylesheets — it allows the user agent to pick the best adapted one for the device it runs on.
referrerpolicy
: A string indicating which referrer to use when fetching the resource:
no-referrer
means that the Referer
header will not be sent. no-referrer-when-downgrade
means that no Referer
header will be sent when navigating to an origin without TLS (HTTPS).
This is a user agent's default behavior, if no policy is otherwise specified. origin
means that the referrer will be the origin of the page, which is roughly the scheme, the host, and the port. origin-when-cross-origin
means that navigating to other origins will be limited to the scheme, the host, and the port, while navigating on the same origin will include the referrer's path. unsafe-url
means that the referrer will include the origin and the path (but not the fragment, password, or username).
This case is unsafe because it can leak origins and paths from TLS-protected resources to insecure origins. rel
: This attribute names a relationship of the linked document to the current document. The attribute must be a space-separated list of link type values.
sizes
: This attribute defines the sizes of the icons for visual media contained in the resource.
It must be present only if the rel
contains a value of icon
or a non-standard type such as Apple's apple-touch-icon
.
It may have the following values:
any
, meaning that the icon can be scaled to any size as it is in a vector format, like image/svg+xml
. <width in pixels>x<height in pixels>
or <width in pixels>X<height in pixels>
. Each of these sizes must be contained in the resource. Note:
Most icon formats are only able to store one single icon; therefore, most of the time, the sizes
attribute contains only one entry.
Microsoft's ICO format and Apple's ICNS format can store multiple icon sizes in a single file. ICO has better browser support, so you should use this format if cross-browser support is a concern.
title
: The title
attribute has special semantics on the <link>
element.
When used on a <link rel="stylesheet">
it defines a default or an alternate stylesheet.
type
: This attribute is used to define the type of the content linked to.
The value of the attribute should be a MIME type such as text/html, text/css, and so on.
The common use of this attribute is to define the type of stylesheet being referenced (such as text/css), but given that CSS is the only stylesheet language used on the web, not only is it possible to omit the type
attribute, but is actually now recommended practice.
It is also used on rel="preload"
link types, to make sure the browser only downloads file types that it supports.
Created in 5/27/2025
Updated in 5/27/2025