2368

I've got a list, and I have a click handler for its items:

<ul>
  <li>foo</li>
  <li>goo</li>
</ul>

How can I change the mouse pointer into a hand pointer (like when hovering over a button)? Right now the pointer turns into a text selection pointer when I hover over the list items.

4
  • 67
    FYI, I retagged your question by removing "jquery" and adding "css" to more accurately reflect the nature of your question and the answer to it. Jun 21, 2010 at 19:52
  • 4
    A good reference list for changing the cursor to a hand and other icons available in css. javascriptkit.com/dhtmltutors/csscursors.shtml
    – Neil
    Aug 24, 2011 at 5:04
  • 3
    If there is a click handler that is added with JavaScript also the css for the mouse pointer should be added with JavaScript. So the user does not think he or she could click where it is not possible. I added an appropriate answer for this.
    – Christoph
    Mar 7, 2014 at 11:34
  • Did you try cursor: grab
    – devssh
    Nov 26, 2018 at 9:29

28 Answers 28

3815

In light of the passage of time, as people have mentioned, you can now safely just use:

li { cursor: pointer; }
7
  • 228
    It's worth noting that just doing cursor: pointer is good enough for everything above IE 5.5: quirksmode.org/css/cursor.html
    – ripper234
    Feb 19, 2012 at 8:59
  • 24
    It's funny how pointer!=cursor and hand!=pointer, adding even more to the confusion. :) Mar 18, 2013 at 10:06
  • 22
    Of note, quirksmode.org/css/user-interface/cursor.html#note (referenced in an earlier comment) states that hand must come after pointer. I recommend using just pointer - IE 5.5 is deader than IE 6.
    – Iiridayn
    Jul 10, 2013 at 21:31
  • 2
    @EdwardBlack it used to be required for odd browsers that weren't standards compliant, the answer was updated long ago to reflect the new way which is simply just pointer this question is over 5 years old btw.
    – Aren
    Oct 24, 2015 at 3:11
  • Indeed. Even if you run IE in IE5 compatibility mode, cursor:pointer still works. So if there ever was an excuse to use cursor:hand, there no longer is.
    – Mr Lister
    Aug 7, 2016 at 16:38
541

Use for li:

li:hover {
    cursor: pointer;
}

See more cursor properties with examples after running snippet option:

An animation showing a cursor hovering over a div of each class

.auto          { cursor: auto; }
.default       { cursor: default; }
.none          { cursor: none; }
.context-menu  { cursor: context-menu; }
.help          { cursor: help; }
.pointer       { cursor: pointer; }
.progress      { cursor: progress; }
.wait          { cursor: wait; }
.cell          { cursor: cell; }
.crosshair     { cursor: crosshair; }
.text          { cursor: text; }
.vertical-text { cursor: vertical-text; }
.alias         { cursor: alias; }
.copy          { cursor: copy; }
.move          { cursor: move; }
.no-drop       { cursor: no-drop; }
.not-allowed   { cursor: not-allowed; }
.all-scroll    { cursor: all-scroll; }
.col-resize    { cursor: col-resize; }
.row-resize    { cursor: row-resize; }
.n-resize      { cursor: n-resize; }
.e-resize      { cursor: e-resize; }
.s-resize      { cursor: s-resize; }
.w-resize      { cursor: w-resize; }
.ns-resize     { cursor: ns-resize; }
.ew-resize     { cursor: ew-resize; }
.ne-resize     { cursor: ne-resize; }
.nw-resize     { cursor: nw-resize; }
.se-resize     { cursor: se-resize; }
.sw-resize     { cursor: sw-resize; }
.nesw-resize   { cursor: nesw-resize; }
.nwse-resize   { cursor: nwse-resize; }

.cursors > div {
    float: left;
    box-sizing: border-box;
    background: #f2f2f2;
    border:1px solid #ccc;
    width: 20%;
    padding: 10px 2px;
    text-align: center;
    white-space: nowrap;
    &:nth-child(even) {
       background: #eee;
    }
    &:hover {
       opacity: 0.25
    }
}
<h1>Example of cursor</h1>

<div class="cursors">
    <div class="auto">auto</div>
    <div class="default">default</div>
    <div class="none">none</div>
    <div class="context-menu">context-menu</div>
    <div class="help">help</div>
    <div class="pointer">pointer</div>
    <div class="progress">progress</div>
    <div class="wait">wait</div>
    <div class="cell">cell</div>
    <div class="crosshair">crosshair</div>
    <div class="text">text</div>
    <div class="vertical-text">vertical-text</div>
    <div class="alias">alias</div>
    <div class="copy">copy</div>
    <div class="move">move</div>
    <div class="no-drop">no-drop</div>
    <div class="not-allowed">not-allowed</div>
    <div class="all-scroll">all-scroll</div>
    <div class="col-resize">col-resize</div>
    <div class="row-resize">row-resize</div>
    <div class="n-resize">n-resize</div>
    <div class="s-resize">s-resize</div>
    <div class="e-resize">e-resize</div>
    <div class="w-resize">w-resize</div>
    <div class="ns-resize">ns-resize</div>
    <div class="ew-resize">ew-resize</div>
    <div class="ne-resize">ne-resize</div>
    <div class="nw-resize">nw-resize</div>
    <div class="se-resize">se-resize</div>
    <div class="sw-resize">sw-resize</div>
    <div class="nesw-resize">nesw-resize</div>
    <div class="nwse-resize">nwse-resize</div>
</div>

4
  • 1
    Off topic, Using which software you did that gif animation? Waiting..@Santosh Khalse
    – fWd82
    Dec 21, 2017 at 12:57
  • 5
    @fWd82 check ShareX - record a gif
    – Hidden
    May 28, 2018 at 9:50
  • I felt this was a useful reminder of cursors and added the code as a tool. Here's a link to the code above: spragucm.com/web-css-cursor-pointers Feb 5, 2019 at 11:49
  • 1
    Awesome animation! @fWd82 - Peek is also good for recording gifs of an area of your screen. github.com/phw/peek Apr 24, 2019 at 14:40
187

You do not require jQuery for this, simply use the following CSS content:

li {cursor: pointer}

And voilà! Handy.

0
86

Use:

li:hover {
    cursor: pointer;
}

Other valid values (which hand is not) for the current HTML specification can be viewed here.

5
  • 18
    I don't understand what the use of the :hover pseudo class is in this case. Is there any advantage for specifying a different cursor when the mouse does not hover the element? Also I read that li:hover does not work in IE6.
    – Robert
    Jun 24, 2014 at 18:19
  • 1
    I suppose :hover is just for specificity, @Robert. I can't test for support in any version of MSIE, sorry, but it wouldn't surprise me if it didn't work! :P
    – Alastair
    Jun 24, 2014 at 19:33
  • why is hand in the top answer, even though it is not working?
    – Black
    Oct 20, 2015 at 11:38
  • 1
    @EdwardBlack cursor: hand is deprecated and not in the css spec. it's like from ie5-6 era. use only pointer. May 5, 2016 at 20:39
  • I'd just like to point out that (in Chrome at least) specifying element:hover will take priority, but happen after element. What I mean by this is if cursor is specified in both element:hover and element the cursor specified in element will flash on the screen for a second before turning to the cursor in :hover. While this isn't important for li elements as they have no default cursor to start with, if someone wants to change the cursor on an element that already has one (like with a elements) they should do so without the :hover specifier.
    – Jahan
    Sep 23, 2023 at 17:51
52

Use

cursor: pointer;
cursor: hand;

if you want to have a crossbrowser result!

3
  • 12
    This is 2018, and cursor:hand is no longer needed for cross-browser development right? May 14, 2018 at 12:45
  • @Haramoz - yeah, cursor: hand is largely obsolete, now. Hasn't been around since IE 5.5.
    – vapcguy
    May 27, 2022 at 2:02
  • It will generate error in css validator Jul 14, 2023 at 16:25
49

CSS:

.auto            { cursor: auto; }
.default         { cursor: default; }
.none            { cursor: none; }
.context-menu    { cursor: context-menu; }
.help            { cursor: help; }
.pointer         { cursor: pointer; }
.progress        { cursor: progress; }
.wait            { cursor: wait; }
.cell            { cursor: cell; }
.crosshair       { cursor: crosshair; }
.text            { cursor: text; }
.vertical-text   { cursor: vertical-text; }
.alias           { cursor: alias; }
.copy            { cursor: copy; }
.move            { cursor: move; }
.no-drop         { cursor: no-drop; }
.not-allowed     { cursor: not-allowed; }
.all-scroll      { cursor: all-scroll; }
.col-resize      { cursor: col-resize; }
.row-resize      { cursor: row-resize; }
.n-resize        { cursor: n-resize; }
.e-resize        { cursor: e-resize; }
.s-resize        { cursor: s-resize; }
.w-resize        { cursor: w-resize; }
.ns-resize       { cursor: ns-resize; }
.ew-resize       { cursor: ew-resize; }
.ne-resize       { cursor: ne-resize; }
.nw-resize       { cursor: nw-resize; }
.se-resize       { cursor: se-resize; }
.sw-resize       { cursor: sw-resize; }
.nesw-resize     { cursor: nesw-resize; }
.nwse-resize     { cursor: nwse-resize; }

You can also have the cursor be an image:

.img-cur {
   cursor: url(images/cursor.png), auto;
}
2
  • 7
    It is not an answer to the question.
    – user1180790
    Nov 16, 2014 at 10:35
  • 11
    this maybe not the direct answer to the question but this is a very good guideline. thanks by the way! Mar 4, 2015 at 2:26
24

I think it would be smart to only show the hand/pointer cursor when JavaScript is available. So people will not have the feeling they can click on something that is not clickable.

To achieve that you could use the JavaScript libary jQuery to add the CSS to the element like so

$("li").css({"cursor":"pointer"});

Or chain it directly to the click handler.

Or when modernizer in combination with <html class="no-js"> is used, the CSS would look like this:

.js li { cursor: pointer; }
23
li:hover {cursor: hand; cursor: pointer;}
0
22

For complete cross browser, use:

cursor: pointer;
cursor: hand;
22

Just for completeness:

cursor: -webkit-grab;

It also gives a hand, the one you know when moving the view of an image around.

It is quite useful if you want to emulate grab behavior using jQuery and mousedown.

Enter image description here

20

You can change it either on hover or just specify cursor:pointer on list item, both will work.

ul li {
  cursor: pointer;
}

Alternatively

ul li:hover {
  cursor: pointer;
}
17

Simply put this code.

li{cursor: pointer;}
16

For being able to make anything get the "mousechange" treatment, you can add a CSS class:

.mousechange:hover {
  cursor: pointer;
}
<span class="mousechange">Some text here</span>

I would not say to use cursor:hand since it was only valid for Internet Explorer 5.5 and below, and Internet Explorer 6 came with Windows XP (2002). People will only get the hint to upgrade when their browser stops working for them. Additionally, in Visual Studio, it will red underline that entry. It tells me:

Validation (CSS 3.0): "hand" is not a valid value for the "cursor" property

0
15

Simply just do something like this:

li { 
  cursor: pointer;
}

I apply it on your code to see how it works:

li {
  cursor: pointer;
}
<ul>
  <li>foo</li>
  <li>goo</li>
</ul>

Note: Also DO not forget you can have any hand cursor with customised cursor, you can create fav hand icon like this one for example:

div {
  display: block;
  width: 400px;
  height: 400px;
  background: red;
  cursor: url(http://findicons.com/files/icons/1840/free_style/128/hand.png) 4 12, auto;
}
<div>
</div>

13
ul li:hover{
   cursor: pointer;
}
11

All of the other responses suggest using the standard CSS pointer, however, there are two methods:

  1. Apply the CSS property cursor:pointer; to the elements. (This is the default style when a cursor hovers over a button.)

  2. Apply the CSS property cursor:url(pointer.png); using a custom graphic for your pointer. This may be more desirable if you want to ensure that the user experience is identical on all platforms (instead of allowing the browser/OS decide what your pointer cursor should look like). Note that fallback options may be added in case the image is not found, including secondary urls or any of the other options i.e. cursor:url(pointer.png,fallback.png,pointer);

Of course these may be applied to the list items in this manner li{cursor:pointer;}, as a class .class{cursor:pointer;}, or as a value for the style attribute of each element style="cursor:pointer;".

10

Use:

ul li:hover{
   cursor: pointer;
}

For more mouse events, check CSS cursor property.

1
  • Duplicate answer. Should've added the link as an edit to the other answer dated Dec. 21, 2014 by user3776645.
    – vapcguy
    Apr 21, 2020 at 3:22
7

You can use one of the following:

li:hover
{
 cursor: pointer;
}

or

li
{
 cursor: pointer;
}

Working example 1:

    li:hover
    {
     cursor: pointer;
    }
<ul>
  <li>foo</li>
  <li>bar</li>
</ul>

Working example 2:

    li
    {
     cursor: pointer;
    }
<ul>
  <li>foo</li>
  <li>bar</li>
</ul>

6

For a basic hand symbol:

Try

cursor: pointer 

If you want a hand symbol like drag some item and drop it, try:

cursor: grab
5

You can use the code below:

li:hover { cursor: pointer; }

0
5

Check the following. I get it from W3Schools.

.alias { cursor: alias; }
.all-scroll { cursor: all-scroll; }
.auto { cursor: auto; }
.cell { cursor: cell; }
.context-menu { cursor: context-menu; }
.col-resize { cursor: col-resize; }
.copy { cursor: copy; }
.crosshair { cursor: crosshair; }
.default { cursor: default; }
.e-resize { cursor: e-resize; }
.ew-resize { cursor: ew-resize; }
.grab {
  cursor: -webkit-grab;
  cursor: grab;
}
.grabbing {
  cursor: -webkit-grabbing;
  cursor: grabbing;
}
.help { cursor: help; }
.move { cursor: move; }
.n-resize { cursor: n-resize; }
.ne-resize { cursor: ne-resize; }
.nesw-resize { cursor: nesw-resize; }
.ns-resize { cursor: ns-resize; }
.nw-resize { cursor: nw-resize; }
.nwse-resize { cursor: nwse-resize; }
.no-drop { cursor: no-drop; }
.none { cursor: none; }
.not-allowed { cursor: not-allowed; }
.pointer { cursor: pointer; }
.progress { cursor: progress; }
.row-resize { cursor: row-resize; }
.s-resize { cursor: s-resize; }
.se-resize { cursor: se-resize; }
.sw-resize { cursor: sw-resize; }
.text { cursor: text; }
.url { cursor: url(myBall.cur), auto; }
.w-resize { cursor: w-resize; }
.wait { cursor: wait; }
.zoom-in { cursor: zoom-in; }
.zoom-out { cursor: zoom-out; }
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>

<body>
  <h1>The cursor property</h1>
  <p>Mouse over the words to change the mouse cursor.</p>
  <p class="alias">alias</p>
  <p class="all-scroll">all-scroll</p>
  <p class="auto">auto</p>
  <p class="cell">cell</p>
  <p class="context-menu">context-menu</p>
  <p class="col-resize">col-resize</p>
  <p class="copy">copy</p>
  <p class="crosshair">crosshair</p>
  <p class="default">default</p>
  <p class="e-resize">e-resize</p>
  <p class="ew-resize">ew-resize</p>
  <p class="grab">grab</p>
  <p class="grabbing">grabbing</p>
  <p class="help">help</p>
  <p class="move">move</p>
  <p class="n-resize">n-resize</p>
  <p class="ne-resize">ne-resize</p>
  <p class="nesw-resize">nesw-resize</p>
  <p class="ns-resize">ns-resize</p>
  <p class="nw-resize">nw-resize</p>
  <p class="nwse-resize">nwse-resize</p>
  <p class="no-drop">no-drop</p>
  <p class="none">none</p>
  <p class="not-allowed">not-allowed</p>
  <p class="pointer">pointer</p>
  <p class="progress">progress</p>
  <p class="row-resize">row-resize</p>
  <p class="s-resize">s-resize</p>
  <p class="se-resize">se-resize</p>
  <p class="sw-resize">sw-resize</p>
  <p class="text">text</p>
  <p class="url">url</p>
  <p class="w-resize">w-resize</p>
  <p class="wait">wait</p>
  <p class="zoom-in">zoom-in</p>
  <p class="zoom-out">zoom-out</p>
</body>

</html>

4

Using an HTML Hack

Note: this is not recommended as it is considered bad practice

Wrapping the content in an anchor tag containing an href attribute will work without explicitly applying the cursor: pointer; property with the side effect of anchor properties (amended with CSS):

<a href="#" style="text-decoration: initial; color: initial;"><div>This is bad practice, but it works.</div></a>

2
  • 1
    This does not work. Anchor tags only have a pointer cursor with underline and a different colour if they have a href.
    – Artyer
    Apr 6, 2017 at 13:47
  • 1
    "How can I make the cursor a hand when a user hovers over a list item?" - For this particular question, it does. But as pointed out by @sandrooco not a good practice.
    – Rohit Nair
    Nov 6, 2017 at 6:43
4

You can also use the following style:

li {
    cursor: grabbing;
}
4

You can just use CSS style for this.

li { cursor: pointer; }
2

just using CSS to set customize the cursor pointer


/* 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: unset;

/* 2 URLs and coordinates, with a keyword fallback */

cursor: url(one.svg) 2 2, url(two.svg) 5 5, progress;

demo

Note: cursor support for many format icons!

such as .cur, .png, .svg, .jpeg, .webp, and so on

li:hover{
  cursor: url("https://cdn.xgqfrms.xyz/cursor/mouse.cur"), pointer;
  color: #0f0;
  background: #000;
}


/*

li:hover{
  cursor: url("../icons/hand.cur"), pointer;
}

*/

li{
  height: 30px;
  width: 100px;
  background: #ccc;
  color: #fff;
  margin: 10px;
  text-align: center;
  list-style: none;
}
<ul>
  <li>a</li>
  <li>b</li>
  <li>c</li>
</ul>

refs

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/cursor

2

css

li:hover { cursor:pointer }

bootsrap

<a href="#" class="pe-auto">This link</a> 
1
<style>
.para{
    color: black;
}
.para:hover{
    cursor: pointer;
    color: blue;
}
</style>
<div class="para">

In the above HTML code [:hover] is used to indicate that the following style must be applied only on hovering or keeping the mouse cursor on it.

There are several types of cursors available in CSS:

View the below code for types of cursor:

<style>
.alias {cursor: alias;}
.all-scroll {cursor: all-scroll;}
.auto {cursor: auto;}
.cell {cursor: cell;}
.context-menu {cursor: context-menu;}
.col-resize {cursor: col-resize;}
.copy {cursor: copy;}
.crosshair {cursor: crosshair;}
.default {cursor: default;}
.e-resize {cursor: e-resize;}
.ew-resize {cursor: ew-resize;}
.grab {cursor: -webkit-grab; cursor: grab;}
.grabbing {cursor: -webkit-grabbing; cursor: grabbing;}
.help {cursor: help;}
.move {cursor: move;}
.n-resize {cursor: n-resize;}
.ne-resize {cursor: ne-resize;}
.nesw-resize {cursor: nesw-resize;}
.ns-resize {cursor: ns-resize;}
.nw-resize {cursor: nw-resize;}
.nwse-resize {cursor: nwse-resize;}
.no-drop {cursor: no-drop;}
.none {cursor: none;}
.not-allowed {cursor: not-allowed;}
.pointer {cursor: pointer;}
.progress {cursor: progress;}
.row-resize {cursor: row-resize;}
.s-resize {cursor: s-resize;}
.se-resize {cursor: se-resize;}
.sw-resize {cursor: sw-resize;}
.text {cursor: text;}
.url {cursor: url(myBall.cur),auto;}
.w-resize {cursor: w-resize;}
.wait {cursor: wait;}
.zoom-in {cursor: zoom-in;}
.zoom-out {cursor: zoom-out;}
</style>

Click the below link for viewing how the cursor property acts:

https://www.w3schools.com/cssref/tryit.asp?filename=trycss_cursor

1

it's equivalent class in tailwindcss is `cursor-pointer'.

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