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Is there a way to detect whether or not a user is using a mobile device in jQuery? Something similar to the CSS @media attribute? I would like to run a different script if the browser is on a handheld device.

The jQuery $.browser function is not what I am looking for.

17
  • 8
    Provide a mobile URL specifically for mobile devices. This is how most major sites handle mobile devices. See m.google.com.
    – user229044
    Aug 18, 2010 at 17:27
  • 6
    jQuery does not, and cannot do everything. It is provides cross-browser DOM traversal and manipulation, simple animation and ajax between browsers, and creates a skeleton framework for plugins to build upon. Please be aware of jQuery's limitations before asking specifically for a jQuery solution.
    – Yi Jiang
    Aug 22, 2010 at 5:38
  • 87
    User agents are constantly moving targets, everyone reading this post should be very wary of user agent sniffing
    – Rob
    Jan 9, 2012 at 10:38
  • 57
    What's a 'mobile' device? Is it a device that supports touch (including Chrome Pixels and Windows 8 laptops with mice)? Is it a device with a small screen (what about retina iPads)? Is it a device with a slow CPU? Or a device with a slow internet connection? Depending on what you want to do the answer to this question will vary. To target screen resolution or touch is easy. If you want to serve up smaller content or less intensive JS for some devices, then there's no silver bullet. Test for window.navigator.connection and fall back to (nasty, bad, ill-advised) userAgent sniffing. My 2 cents. Jul 9, 2013 at 4:42
  • 6
    @Cole"Cole9"Johnson My point exactly. 'Mobile' seems to be used as an umbrella term for touch, slow CPU, slow network and small screen. But none of these are perfect assumptions. I believe that considering these individually will result in a better product than designing for some vague concept of 'mobile'. Hence me posing that question to the OP. Aug 20, 2013 at 2:38

66 Answers 66

2307

Editor's note: user agent detection is not a recommended technique for modern web apps. See the comments below this answer for confirmation of this fact. It is suggested to use one of the other answers using feature detection and/or media queries.


Instead of using jQuery you can use simple JavaScript to detect it:

if( /Android|webOS|iPhone|iPad|iPod|BlackBerry|IEMobile|Opera Mini/i.test(navigator.userAgent) ) {
 // some code..
}

Or you can combine them both to make it more accessible through jQuery...

$.browser.device = (/android|webos|iphone|ipad|ipod|blackberry|iemobile|opera mini/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase()));

Now $.browser will return "device" for all above devices

Note: $.browser removed on jQuery v1.9.1. But you can use this by using jQuery migration plugin Code


A more thorough version:

var isMobile = false; //initiate as false
// device detection
if(/(android|bb\d+|meego).+mobile|avantgo|bada\/|blackberry|blazer|compal|elaine|fennec|hiptop|iemobile|ip(hone|od)|ipad|iris|kindle|Android|Silk|lge |maemo|midp|mmp|netfront|opera m(ob|in)i|palm( os)?|phone|p(ixi|re)\/|plucker|pocket|psp|series(4|6)0|symbian|treo|up\.(browser|link)|vodafone|wap|windows (ce|phone)|xda|xiino/i.test(navigator.userAgent) 
    || /1207|6310|6590|3gso|4thp|50[1-6]i|770s|802s|a wa|abac|ac(er|oo|s\-)|ai(ko|rn)|al(av|ca|co)|amoi|an(ex|ny|yw)|aptu|ar(ch|go)|as(te|us)|attw|au(di|\-m|r |s )|avan|be(ck|ll|nq)|bi(lb|rd)|bl(ac|az)|br(e|v)w|bumb|bw\-(n|u)|c55\/|capi|ccwa|cdm\-|cell|chtm|cldc|cmd\-|co(mp|nd)|craw|da(it|ll|ng)|dbte|dc\-s|devi|dica|dmob|do(c|p)o|ds(12|\-d)|el(49|ai)|em(l2|ul)|er(ic|k0)|esl8|ez([4-7]0|os|wa|ze)|fetc|fly(\-|_)|g1 u|g560|gene|gf\-5|g\-mo|go(\.w|od)|gr(ad|un)|haie|hcit|hd\-(m|p|t)|hei\-|hi(pt|ta)|hp( i|ip)|hs\-c|ht(c(\-| |_|a|g|p|s|t)|tp)|hu(aw|tc)|i\-(20|go|ma)|i230|iac( |\-|\/)|ibro|idea|ig01|ikom|im1k|inno|ipaq|iris|ja(t|v)a|jbro|jemu|jigs|kddi|keji|kgt( |\/)|klon|kpt |kwc\-|kyo(c|k)|le(no|xi)|lg( g|\/(k|l|u)|50|54|\-[a-w])|libw|lynx|m1\-w|m3ga|m50\/|ma(te|ui|xo)|mc(01|21|ca)|m\-cr|me(rc|ri)|mi(o8|oa|ts)|mmef|mo(01|02|bi|de|do|t(\-| |o|v)|zz)|mt(50|p1|v )|mwbp|mywa|n10[0-2]|n20[2-3]|n30(0|2)|n50(0|2|5)|n7(0(0|1)|10)|ne((c|m)\-|on|tf|wf|wg|wt)|nok(6|i)|nzph|o2im|op(ti|wv)|oran|owg1|p800|pan(a|d|t)|pdxg|pg(13|\-([1-8]|c))|phil|pire|pl(ay|uc)|pn\-2|po(ck|rt|se)|prox|psio|pt\-g|qa\-a|qc(07|12|21|32|60|\-[2-7]|i\-)|qtek|r380|r600|raks|rim9|ro(ve|zo)|s55\/|sa(ge|ma|mm|ms|ny|va)|sc(01|h\-|oo|p\-)|sdk\/|se(c(\-|0|1)|47|mc|nd|ri)|sgh\-|shar|sie(\-|m)|sk\-0|sl(45|id)|sm(al|ar|b3|it|t5)|so(ft|ny)|sp(01|h\-|v\-|v )|sy(01|mb)|t2(18|50)|t6(00|10|18)|ta(gt|lk)|tcl\-|tdg\-|tel(i|m)|tim\-|t\-mo|to(pl|sh)|ts(70|m\-|m3|m5)|tx\-9|up(\.b|g1|si)|utst|v400|v750|veri|vi(rg|te)|vk(40|5[0-3]|\-v)|vm40|voda|vulc|vx(52|53|60|61|70|80|81|83|85|98)|w3c(\-| )|webc|whit|wi(g |nc|nw)|wmlb|wonu|x700|yas\-|your|zeto|zte\-/i.test(navigator.userAgent.substr(0,4))) { 
    isMobile = true;
}
6
  • 1
    Can we use navigator.userAgentData.mobile? Apr 15, 2022 at 7:14
  • Nope. It does not work in firefox. UserAgentData is undefined in FF.
    – Piyush
    May 31, 2022 at 16:19
  • 2
    Please, in 2023, do not try to create separate versions of your website for phones. Instead, use feature detection to determine input mechanism and viewport size. User-Agent sniffing is an awful solution anyway, and not future-proof.
    – Jake
    Jan 28, 2023 at 3:37
  • 1
    @Jake It's useful to keep this answer here for explaining why historically, this solution has been picked, and, together with its starting note, why this solution is to be avoided, if anybody would later think that this is a good idea. Remove the answer, and you risk having somebody later figure out that this is a great way to engineer their websites. It should be unmarked as the correct answer, though. And please, everyone, upvote the other answers instead. May 30, 2023 at 4:44
  • 3
    @Jake Also; I see you've pasted the same two comments over multiple answers. This is not really helpful. Provide a link to the correct solution instead. Endless scrolling through answers, reading "this is an appalling solution; use feature detection" is not that useful. Where's the answer that explains how to use feature detection? And why exactly are these other answers not sufficient? When do they not work? May 30, 2023 at 4:47
661

For me small is beautiful so I'm using this technique:

In CSS file:

/* Smartphones ----------- */
@media only screen and (max-width: 760px) {
  #some-element { display: none; }
}

In jQuery/JavaScript file:

$( document ).ready(function() {      
    var is_mobile = false;

    if( $('#some-element').css('display')=='none') {
        is_mobile = true;       
    }

    // now I can use is_mobile to run javascript conditionally

    if (is_mobile == true) {
        //Conditional script here
    }
 });

My objective was to have my site "mobile-friendly". So I use CSS Media Queries do show/hide elements depending on the screen size.

For example, in my mobile version I don't want to activate the Facebook Like Box, because it loads all those profile images and stuff. And that's not good for mobile visitors. So, besides hiding the container element, I also do this inside the jQuery code block (above):

if(!is_mobile) {
    (function(d, s, id) {
        var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];
        if (d.getElementById(id)) return;
        js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id;
        js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/pt_PT/all.js#xfbml=1&appId=210731252294735";
        fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);
    }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk'));
}

You can see it in action at http://lisboaautentica.com

I'm still working on the the mobile version, so it's still not looking as it should, as of writing this.

Update by dekin88

There is a JavaScript API built-in for detecting media. Rather than using the above solution simply use the following:

$(function() {      
    let isMobile = window.matchMedia("only screen and (max-width: 760px)").matches;

    if (isMobile) {
        //Conditional script here
    }
 });

Browser Supports: http://caniuse.com/#feat=matchmedia

The advantage of this method is that it's not only simpler and shorter, but you can conditionally target different devices such as smartphones and tablets separately if necessary without having to add any dummy elements into the DOM.

6
  • 85
    -1 The screen.width property is a global. There's no need to arbitrarily add an element to the DOM and unnecessarily bring in CSS media queries. Plus, if the browser is on a desktop and the user resizes the window, $is_mobile is not going to be updated.
    – merv
    Nov 9, 2012 at 15:46
  • 130
    Why not: if( screen.width <= 480 ) { // is mobile } Jan 20, 2013 at 1:05
  • 95
    You've just reinvented window.matchMedia: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window.matchMedia
    – Paul Irish
    Feb 26, 2014 at 19:27
  • The bootstrap/jquery technique is very good if it's put in a function. Just call on screenorientation changed or when size change. Feb 18, 2022 at 18:55
  • This breaks in landscape mode (pixel 5, Firefox and Chrome). I suggest editing it like so: window.matchMedia('only screen and ((max-width: 767px) or (max-height: 767px))').matches
    – Zach
    Dec 23, 2022 at 11:37
295

While Mozilla's Browser detection using the user agent now recommends against this solution:

Note: It's worth re-iterating: it's very rarely a good idea to use user agent sniffing. You can almost always find a better, more broadly compatible way to solve your problem!

it used to recommend:

In summary, we recommend looking for the string “Mobi” anywhere in the User Agent to detect a mobile device.

Like this:

if (/Mobi/.test(navigator.userAgent)) {
    // mobile!
}

This will match all common mobile browser user agents, including mobile Mozilla, Safari, IE, Opera, Chrome, etc.

Update for Android

EricL recommends testing for Android as a user agent also, as the Chrome user agent string for tablets does not include "Mobi" (the phone versions do however):

if (/Mobi|Android/i.test(navigator.userAgent)) {
    // mobile!
}
3
  • 15
    The linked article mentions: If the device is large enough that it's not marked with “Mobi”, you should serve your desktop site (which, as a best practice, should support touch input anyway, as more desktop machines are appearing with touchscreens). Jun 9, 2016 at 13:27
  • 2
    Please, in 2023, do not try to create separate versions of your website for phones. Instead, use feature detection to determine input mechanism and viewport size. User-Agent sniffing is an awful solution anyway, and not future-proof.
    – Jake
    Jan 28, 2023 at 3:38
  • If you need to support "Opera Mini" (which hopefully is not the case), then you have to include exactly that in the regex as well, since the user agent contains neither "Mobi" nor "Android".
    – RiZKiT
    Jul 5, 2023 at 13:08
109

A simple and effective one-liner:

function isMobile() { return ('ontouchstart' in document.documentElement); }

However above code doesn't take into account the case for laptops with touchscreen. Thus, I provide this second version, based on @Julian solution:

function isMobile() {
  try{ document.createEvent("TouchEvent"); return true; }
  catch(e){ return false; }
}
3
  • 39
    What about Windows laptops with touch screen? Dec 26, 2013 at 23:23
  • 14
    The second isMobile function you provided returns true on my destop device!! (Google Chrome v44.0)
    – Luke
    Aug 22, 2015 at 11:26
  • 22
    This is more of a isTouchSupported method not really mobile detection.
    – Barkermn01
    May 1, 2016 at 16:04
74

It's not jQuery, but I found this: http://detectmobilebrowser.com/

It provides scripts to detect mobile browsers in several languages, one of which is JavaScript. That may help you with what you're looking for.

However, since you are using jQuery, you might want to be aware of the jQuery.support collection. It's a collection of properties for detecting the capabilities of the current browser. Documentation is here: http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.support/

Since I don't know what exactly what you're trying to accomplish, I don't know which of these will be the most useful.

All that being said, I think your best bet is to either redirect or write a different script to the output using a server-side language (if that is an option). Since you don't really know the capabilities of a mobile browser x, doing the detection, and alteration logic on the server side would be the most reliable method. Of course, all of that is a moot point if you can't use a server side language :)

1
  • 14
    There IS a jQuery version there, and it works perfectly, but for tablet detection you must add |android|ipad|playbook|silk as described in the about section (it's by design)
    – cprcrack
    Aug 2, 2013 at 20:15
50

Sometimes it is desired to know which brand device a client is using in order to show content specific to that device, like a link to the iPhone store or the Android market. Modernizer is great, but only shows you browser capabilities, like HTML5, or Flash.

Here is my UserAgent solution in jQuery to display a different class for each device type:

/*** sniff the UA of the client and show hidden div's for that device ***/
var customizeForDevice = function(){
    var ua = navigator.userAgent;
    var checker = {
      iphone: ua.match(/(iPhone|iPod|iPad)/),
      blackberry: ua.match(/BlackBerry/),
      android: ua.match(/Android/)
    };
    if (checker.android){
        $('.android-only').show();
    }
    else if (checker.iphone){
        $('.idevice-only').show();
    }
    else if (checker.blackberry){
        $('.berry-only').show();
    }
    else {
        $('.unknown-device').show();
    }
}

This solution is from Graphics Maniacs http://graphicmaniacs.com/note/detecting-iphone-ipod-ipad-android-and-blackberry-browser-with-javascript-and-php/

0
47

Found a solution in: http://www.abeautifulsite.net/blog/2011/11/detecting-mobile-devices-with-javascript/.

var isMobile = {
    Android: function() {
        return navigator.userAgent.match(/Android/i);
    },
    BlackBerry: function() {
        return navigator.userAgent.match(/BlackBerry/i);
    },
    iOS: function() {
        return navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone|iPad|iPod/i);
    },
    Opera: function() {
        return navigator.userAgent.match(/Opera Mini/i);
    },
    Windows: function() {
        return navigator.userAgent.match(/IEMobile/i);
    },
    any: function() {
        return (isMobile.Android() || isMobile.BlackBerry() || isMobile.iOS() || isMobile.Opera() || isMobile.Windows());
    }
};

And then to verify if its a Mobile, you can test using:

if(isMobile.any()) {
   //some code...
}
0
32

If by "mobile" you mean "small screen," I use this:

var windowWidth = window.screen.width < window.outerWidth ?
                  window.screen.width : window.outerWidth;
var mobile = windowWidth < 500;

On iPhone you'll end up with a window.screen.width of 320. On Android you'll end up with a window.outerWidth of 480 (though that can depend on the Android). iPads and Android tablets will return numbers like 768 so they'll get the full view like you'd want.

1
  • 1
    windowWidth can be set to Math.min(window.screen.width, window.outerWidth) to make it easier to read. Feb 4, 2023 at 18:55
32

In one line of javascript:

var isMobile = ('ontouchstart' in document.documentElement && /mobi/i.test(navigator.userAgent));

If the user agent contains 'Mobi' (as per MDN) and ontouchstart is available then it is likely to be a mobile device.

EDIT: Updates the regex code in response to feedback in the comments. Using regex/mobi/i the i makes it case-insensitive, and mobi matches all mobile browsers. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/User-Agent/Firefox

0
22

I know this question has a lot of answers, but from what I saw nobody approaches the answer the way I would solve this.

CSS uses width (Media Queries) to determine which styles applied to the web document baseed on width. Why not use width in the JavaScript?

For instance in Bootstrap's (Mobile First) Media Queries, there exist 4 snap/break points:

  • Extra Small Devices are 768 pixels and under.
  • Small Devices range from 768 to 991 pixels.
  • Medium Devices range from 992 to 1199 pixels.
  • Large Devices are 1200 pixels and up.

We can use this to also solve our JavaScript issue as well.

First we will create a function that gets the window size and returns a value that allows us to see what size device is viewing our application:

var getBrowserWidth = function(){
    if(window.innerWidth < 768){
        // Extra Small Device
        return "xs";
    } else if(window.innerWidth < 991){
        // Small Device
        return "sm"
    } else if(window.innerWidth < 1199){
        // Medium Device
        return "md"
    } else {
        // Large Device
        return "lg"
    }
};

Now that we have the function set up, we can call it ans store the value:

var device = getBrowserWidth();

Your question was

I would like to run a different script if the browser is on a handheld device.

Now that we have the device information all that is left is an if statement:

if(device === "xs"){
  // Enter your script for handheld devices here 
}

Here is an example on CodePen: http://codepen.io/jacob-king/pen/jWEeWG

2
  • This worked best for me. Since I was using bootstrap for some mobile forward pages, this technique worked well to auto redirect away from a non-mobile forward (non-bootstrap) to a bootstrap page. Tip: I found one small problem in IE11 F12 tools: I had emulation turned on in F12 Dev Tools for a mobile device and it had trouble detecting the window size. I had re-sized it below the xs break point but it was detecting it as md. As soon I turned off emulating a phone and refreshed the page, it correctly detected the size and in my code I redirect away to a bootstrap page. Feb 29, 2016 at 18:53
  • 2
    @JacobKing you said Small Devices range from 768 to 991 pixels. this means it should be window.innerWidth < 992 (991 is included) the same thing for 1199 it should be < 1200 instead
    – medBouzid
    Oct 1, 2017 at 23:47
19

You can't rely on navigator.userAgent, not every device reveals its real OS. On my HTC for example, it depends on the settings ("using mobile version" on/off). On http://my.clockodo.com, we simply used screen.width to detect small devices. Unfortunately, in some Android versions there's a bug with screen.width. You can combine this way with the userAgent:

if(screen.width < 500 ||
 navigator.userAgent.match(/Android/i) ||
 navigator.userAgent.match(/webOS/i) ||
 navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i) ||
 navigator.userAgent.match(/iPod/i)) {
alert("This is a mobile device");
}
1
  • 10
    Many mobiles have width of >1000, especially on landscape mode
    – oriadam
    Dec 2, 2015 at 17:06
16

If you use Modernizr, it is very easy to use Modernizr.touch as mentioned earlier.

However, I prefer using a combination of Modernizr.touch and user agent testing, just to be safe.

var deviceAgent = navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase();

var isTouchDevice = Modernizr.touch || 
(deviceAgent.match(/(iphone|ipod|ipad)/) ||
deviceAgent.match(/(android)/)  || 
deviceAgent.match(/(iemobile)/) || 
deviceAgent.match(/iphone/i) || 
deviceAgent.match(/ipad/i) || 
deviceAgent.match(/ipod/i) || 
deviceAgent.match(/blackberry/i) || 
deviceAgent.match(/bada/i));

if (isTouchDevice) {
        //Do something touchy
    } else {
        //Can't touch this
    }

If you don't use Modernizr, you can simply replace the Modernizr.touch function above with ('ontouchstart' in document.documentElement)

Also note that testing the user agent iemobile will give you broader range of detected Microsoft mobile devices than Windows Phone.

Also see this SO question

3
  • And the same in Dart: TouchEvent.supported. Aug 2, 2013 at 11:26
  • ('ontouchstart' in window) is an alternative to Modernizr.touch, too, hacks.mozilla.org/2013/04/…
    – JVE999
    Jun 17, 2014 at 18:22
  • You should really use RegEx | instead of many matches. You also don't need the toLowerCase() because you have the i modifier. Here: var isTouchDevice = Modernizr.touch || /iphone|ipod|ipad|android|iemobile|iphone|ipad|ipod|blackberry|bada/i.test(navigator.userAgent);
    – oriadam
    Dec 2, 2015 at 17:03
14

I am surprised that no one pointed out a nice site: http://detectmobilebrowsers.com/ It has ready made code in different languages for mobile detection (including but not limited to):

  • Apache
  • ASP
  • C#
  • IIS
  • JavaScript
  • NGINX
  • PHP
  • Perl
  • Python
  • Rails

And if you need to detect the tablets as well, just check About section for additional RegEx parameter.

Android tablets, iPads, Kindle Fires and PlayBooks are not detected by design. To add support for tablets, add |android|ipad|playbook|silk to the first regex.

3
  • For me it was working, can you be more specific what code do you use and where seems to be an issue? Apr 29, 2014 at 11:18
  • that page is response, of all other responses are copy paste of that page Mar 17, 2018 at 10:15
  • These are probably not up to date (although I haven't verified that), since when I visited it, the site says: "Regex updated: 1 August 2014".
    – Greg
    Jul 15, 2020 at 22:30
12

If you're not particularly worried about small displays you could use width/height detection. So that way if width is under a certain size, the mobile site is thrown up. It may not be the perfect way, but it will probably be the easiest to detect for multiple devices. You may need to put in a specific one for the iPhone 4 (large resolution).

12

If found that just checking navigator.userAgent isn't always reliable. Greater reliability can be achieved by also checking navigator.platform. A simple modification to a previous answer seems to work better:

if (/Android|webOS|iPhone|iPad|iPod|BlackBerry/i.test(navigator.userAgent) ||
   (/Android|webOS|iPhone|iPad|iPod|BlackBerry/i.test(navigator.platform))) {
    // some code...
}
0
9

To add an extra layer of control I use the HTML5 storage to detect if it is using mobile storage or desktop storage. If the browser does not support storage I have an array of mobile browser names and I compare the user agent with the browsers in the array.

It is pretty simple. Here is the function:

// Used to detect whether the users browser is an mobile browser
function isMobile() {
    ///<summary>Detecting whether the browser is a mobile browser or desktop browser</summary>
    ///<returns>A boolean value indicating whether the browser is a mobile browser or not</returns>

    if (sessionStorage.desktop) // desktop storage 
        return false;
    else if (localStorage.mobile) // mobile storage
        return true;

    // alternative
    mobile = ['iphone','ipad','android','blackberry','nokia','opera mini','windows mobile','windows phone','iemobile','tablet','mobi']; 
    var ua=navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase();
    for (var i in mobile) if (ua.indexOf(mobile[i]) > -1) return true;

    // nothing found.. assume desktop
    return false;
}
1
  • 1
    your assumption based on localStorage is quite interesting, can you provide a range of supported device or browsers that correctly match your script? I'm interested in finding a solution for this question I asked, and trying to detect mobile-tablet browsers can indeed be an interesting workaround
    – Gruber
    Jun 1, 2013 at 17:08
9

I advise you check out http://wurfl.io/

In a nutshell, if you import a tiny JavaScript file:

<script type='text/javascript' src="//wurfl.io/wurfl.js"></script>

You will be left with a JSON object that looks like:

{
 "complete_device_name":"Google Nexus 7",
 "is_mobile":true,
 "form_factor":"Tablet"
}

(That's assuming you are using a Nexus 7, of course) and you will be able to do things like:

if(WURFL.is_mobile) {
    //dostuff();
}

This is what you are looking for.

Disclaimer: I work for the company that offers this free service.

2
  • Something isn't right about the Nexus 7. Are you sure you didn't have the Nexus spoof the UA string in the settings? as far as iPad mini is concerned, yes, that's very hard to distinguish from the other iPad, but it was still recognised as an iPad, right? Is it you that downvoted my post?
    – Luca P.
    Apr 3, 2014 at 13:48
  • No, the ipad mini was detected as a desktop device
    – Jacob
    Apr 3, 2014 at 13:50
9

Great answer thanks. Small improvement to support Windows phone and Zune:

if (navigator.userAgent.match(/Android/i) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/webOS/i) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/iPad/i) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/iPod/i) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/BlackBerry/) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/Windows Phone/i) ||
  navigator.userAgent.match(/ZuneWP7/i)
) {
  // some code
  self.location = "top.htm";
}
2
  • I would say this is the simplest (maybe not best) fix if you are trying to handle hover/dragging events for mobile devices. I use something like this to create a "isMobile" boolean that is then checked for every hover/mouseover event. Thats my two cents, anyways. Adding more js libraries or code that requires user interaction doesn't make too much sense to me; correct me if I am wrong though.
    – MeanMatt
    Mar 1, 2012 at 0:54
  • 5
    Since you're using regular expressions, actually use them: if (navigator.userAgent.match(/Android|webOS|iPhone|iPad|etc/)){self.location = "top.htm"} Aug 10, 2019 at 22:55
9

I know it's very old question about this kind of detection.

My solution is based on scroller width (is exist or not).

// this function will check the width of scroller
// if scroller width is 0px it's mobile device

//function ismob() {
    var dv = document.getElementById('divscr');
    var sp=document.getElementById('res');
    if (dv.offsetWidth - dv.clientWidth == 10) {sp.innerHTML='Is mobile'; //return true; 
    } else {
    sp.innerHTML='It is not mobile'; //return false;
    }
//}
<!-- put hidden div on very begining of page -->
<div id="divscr" style="position:fixed;top:0;left:0;width:50px;height:50px;overflow:hidden;overflow-y:scroll;z-index:-1;visibility:hidden;"></div>
<span id="res"></span>

6
  • I like this solution, are there any reason why we shouldn't use this?
    – James
    Jan 27, 2020 at 11:47
  • 3
    Absolutely BRILLIANT! And it's totally cross-browser. Thank you! Edit: it's better to check for (dv.offsetWidth - dv.clientWidth) == 0 because the scrollbar gets smaller than 10px if the window is zoomed in, which is the case in most modern laptops with high resolution but small screen (ie. 4k resolution on a 15.6 inch screen)
    – Ivan
    May 3, 2020 at 7:51
  • what a unique solution. i havent seen this anywhere else yet. i can see this running into issues whereby the scrollbar is hidden (e.g. ::-webkit-scrollbar { display: none }) has anybody tested that yet?
    – oldboy
    Nov 13, 2020 at 7:44
  • @oldboy try to set visible scrollbar for div (id="divscr"). I don't use chrome and doesn't want install it just for testing purpose. Anyone?
    – nelek
    Jan 5, 2021 at 7:39
  • Great solution! I just removed the need for an existing div: function is_mobile() { var div = document.createElement('div'); div.style.position = 'fixed'; div.style.left = 0; div.style.top = 0; div.style.width = '50px'; div.style.height = '50px'; div.style.overflowY = 'scroll'; document.body.append(div); if (div.offsetWidth - div.clientWidth == 0) { var ret = true; } else { var ret = false; } div.remove(); return ret; }
    – Spider IT
    Sep 10, 2022 at 7:57
8

You can use media query to be able to handle it easily.

isMobile = function(){
    var isMobile = window.matchMedia("only screen and (max-width: 760px)");
    return isMobile.matches ? true : false
}
0
7

Check out this post, it gives a really nice code snippet for what to do when touch devices are detected or what to do if touchstart event is called:

$(function(){
  if(window.Touch) {
    touch_detect.auto_detected();
  } else {
    document.ontouchstart = touch_detect.surface;
  }
}); // End loaded jQuery
var touch_detect = {
  auto_detected: function(event){
    /* add everything you want to do onLoad here (eg. activating hover controls) */
    alert('this was auto detected');
    activateTouchArea();
  },
  surface: function(event){
    /* add everything you want to do ontouchstart here (eg. drag & drop) - you can fire this in both places */
    alert('this was detected by touching');
    activateTouchArea();
  }
}; // touch_detect
function activateTouchArea(){
  /* make sure our screen doesn't scroll when we move the "touchable area" */
  var element = document.getElementById('element_id');
  element.addEventListener("touchstart", touchStart, false);
}
function touchStart(event) {
  /* modularize preventing the default behavior so we can use it again */
  event.preventDefault();
}
2
  • 'ontouchstart' in document.documentElement is probably a better test for touch support than window.Touch. Even better, use Modernizr.js (modernizr.com) because have spent a lot of thought trying to get touch detection right. You can see their touch detection code in modernizr.com/downloads/modernizr.js if you view the development code and search on "touch".
    – robocat
    Sep 13, 2012 at 1:44
  • 3
    Touch detection has gotten me into trouble, because some new Windows 8 laptops detect as touchscreens in Chrome, leading to odd results.
    – JWarner
    May 2, 2014 at 17:12
6

Use this:

/**  * jQuery.browser.mobile (http://detectmobilebrowser.com/)  * jQuery.browser.mobile will be true if the browser is a mobile device  **/ (function(a){jQuery.browser.mobile=/android.+mobile|avantgo|bada\/|blackberry|blazer|compal|elaine|fennec|hiptop|iemobile|ip(hone|od)|iris|kindle|lge |maemo|midp|mmp|netfront|opera m(ob|in)i|palm( os)?|phone|p(ixi|re)\/|plucker|pocket|psp|symbian|treo|up\.(browser|link)|vodafone|wap|windows (ce|phone)|xda|xiino/i.test(a)||/1207|6310|6590|3gso|4thp|50[1-6]i|770s|802s|a wa|abac|ac(er|oo|s\-)|ai(ko|rn)|al(av|ca|co)|amoi|an(ex|ny|yw)|aptu|ar(ch|go)|as(te|us)|attw|au(di|\-m|r |s )|avan|be(ck|ll|nq)|bi(lb|rd)|bl(ac|az)|br(e|v)w|bumb|bw\-(n|u)|c55\/|capi|ccwa|cdm\-|cell|chtm|cldc|cmd\-|co(mp|nd)|craw|da(it|ll|ng)|dbte|dc\-s|devi|dica|dmob|do(c|p)o|ds(12|\-d)|el(49|ai)|em(l2|ul)|er(ic|k0)|esl8|ez([4-7]0|os|wa|ze)|fetc|fly(\-|_)|g1 u|g560|gene|gf\-5|g\-mo|go(\.w|od)|gr(ad|un)|haie|hcit|hd\-(m|p|t)|hei\-|hi(pt|ta)|hp( i|ip)|hs\-c|ht(c(\-| |_|a|g|p|s|t)|tp)|hu(aw|tc)|i\-(20|go|ma)|i230|iac( |\-|\/)|ibro|idea|ig01|ikom|im1k|inno|ipaq|iris|ja(t|v)a|jbro|jemu|jigs|kddi|keji|kgt( |\/)|klon|kpt |kwc\-|kyo(c|k)|le(no|xi)|lg( g|\/(k|l|u)|50|54|e\-|e\/|\-[a-w])|libw|lynx|m1\-w|m3ga|m50\/|ma(te|ui|xo)|mc(01|21|ca)|m\-cr|me(di|rc|ri)|mi(o8|oa|ts)|mmef|mo(01|02|bi|de|do|t(\-| |o|v)|zz)|mt(50|p1|v )|mwbp|mywa|n10[0-2]|n20[2-3]|n30(0|2)|n50(0|2|5)|n7(0(0|1)|10)|ne((c|m)\-|on|tf|wf|wg|wt)|nok(6|i)|nzph|o2im|op(ti|wv)|oran|owg1|p800|pan(a|d|t)|pdxg|pg(13|\-([1-8]|c))|phil|pire|pl(ay|uc)|pn\-2|po(ck|rt|se)|prox|psio|pt\-g|qa\-a|qc(07|12|21|32|60|\-[2-7]|i\-)|qtek|r380|r600|raks|rim9|ro(ve|zo)|s55\/|sa(ge|ma|mm|ms|ny|va)|sc(01|h\-|oo|p\-)|sdk\/|se(c(\-|0|1)|47|mc|nd|ri)|sgh\-|shar|sie(\-|m)|sk\-0|sl(45|id)|sm(al|ar|b3|it|t5)|so(ft|ny)|sp(01|h\-|v\-|v )|sy(01|mb)|t2(18|50)|t6(00|10|18)|ta(gt|lk)|tcl\-|tdg\-|tel(i|m)|tim\-|t\-mo|to(pl|sh)|ts(70|m\-|m3|m5)|tx\-9|up(\.b|g1|si)|utst|v400|v750|veri|vi(rg|te)|vk(40|5[0-3]|\-v)|vm40|voda|vulc|vx(52|53|60|61|70|80|81|83|85|98)|w3c(\-| )|webc|whit|wi(g |nc|nw)|wmlb|wonu|x700|xda(\-|2|g)|yas\-|your|zeto|zte\-/i.test(a.substr(0,4))})(navigator.userAgent||navigator.vendor||window.opera);

Then use this:

if(jQuery.browser.mobile)
{
   console.log('You are using a mobile device!');
}
else
{
   console.log('You are not using a mobile device!');
}
6

All answers use user-agent to detect the browser but device detection based on user-agent is not very good solution, better is to detect features like touch device (in new jQuery they remove $.browser and use $.support instead).

To detect mobile you can check for touch events:

function is_touch_device() {
  return 'ontouchstart' in window // works on most browsers 
      || 'onmsgesturechange' in window; // works on ie10
}

Taken from What's the best way to detect a 'touch screen' device using JavaScript?

3
  • 5
    Unfortunately, this is not reliable and anyway it returns true on desktop PCs with touchscreens. stucox.com/blog/you-cant-detect-a-touchscreen May 20, 2014 at 7:03
  • 2
    Don't forget laptops with touchscreens and full browser experiences. :-) Jul 13, 2015 at 5:17
  • this may not be the way to go to check whether it's a mobile-device or not but as the name of your function states it's perfect to check for touch-enabled devices. +1 from me ;-)
    – Kathara
    Jun 25, 2019 at 13:55
6

I would be suggesting to use following combo of strings, to check if device type being used.

As per Mozilla documentation string Mobi is recommended. But, some of the old tablets doesn't return true if only Mobi is used, hence we should use Tablet string too.

Similarly, for being on the safe side iPad and iPhone strings could also be used to check the device type.

Most of the new devices would return true for Mobi string alone.

if (/Mobi|Tablet|iPad|iPhone/.test(navigator.userAgent)) {
    // do something
}
1
  • 5
    I had to add "android" in there to get working on tablets. I'll have to tweak but I like the approach.
    – Andy
    May 4, 2017 at 3:18
6

I know this old question and there is a lot of answer but I think this function is simple and will help for detect all mobile, Tablet and computer browser it work like a charm.

function Device_Type() 
{
    var Return_Device; 
    if(/(up.browser|up.link|mmp|symbian|smartphone|midp|wap|phone|android|iemobile|w3c|acs\-|alav|alca|amoi|audi|avan|benq|bird|blac|blaz|brew|cell|cldc|cmd\-|dang|doco|eric|hipt|inno|ipaq|java|jigs|kddi|keji|leno|lg\-c|lg\-d|lg\-g|lge\-|maui|maxo|midp|mits|mmef|mobi|mot\-|moto|mwbp|nec\-|newt|noki|palm|pana|pant|phil|play|port|prox|qwap|sage|sams|sany|sch\-|sec\-|send|seri|sgh\-|shar|sie\-|siem|smal|smar|sony|sph\-|symb|t\-mo|teli|tim\-|tosh|tsm\-|upg1|upsi|vk\-v|voda|wap\-|wapa|wapi|wapp|wapr|webc|winw|winw|xda|xda\-) /i.test(navigator.userAgent))
    {
        if(/(tablet|ipad|playbook)|(android(?!.*(mobi|opera mini)))/i.test(navigator.userAgent)) 
        {
            Return_Device = 'Tablet';
        }
        else
        {
            Return_Device = 'Mobile';
        }
    }
    else if(/(tablet|ipad|playbook)|(android(?!.*(mobi|opera mini)))/i.test(navigator.userAgent)) 
    {
        Return_Device = 'Tablet';
    }
    else
    {
        Return_Device = 'Desktop';
    }

    return Return_Device;
}
5

Here's a function you can use to get a true/false answer as to whether you're running on a mobile browser. Yes, it is browser-sniffing, but sometimes that is exactly what you need.

function is_mobile() {
    var agents = ['android', 'webos', 'iphone', 'ipad', 'blackberry'];
    for(i in agents) {
        if(navigator.userAgent.match('/'+agents[i]+'/i')) {
            return true;
        }
    }
    return false;
}
2
  • 1
    That will fail to detect many mobile browsers, especially mobile Chrome. It will also probably fail on some of: Opera Mobile, Firefox mobile, Opera Mini, various popular Chinese mobile browsers, etc etc.
    – robocat
    Sep 13, 2012 at 1:37
  • You don't need for for this! +You forgot to create a RegExp. Here's a simpler one: return !!navigator.userAgent.match(new RegExp(agents.join('|'),'i'))
    – oriadam
    Dec 2, 2015 at 17:09
5

Simple function based on http://detectmobilebrowser.com/

function isMobile() {
    var a = navigator.userAgent||navigator.vendor||window.opera;
    return /(android|bb\d+|meego).+mobile|avantgo|bada\/|blackberry|blazer|compal|elaine|fennec|hiptop|iemobile|ip(hone|od)|iris|kindle|lge |maemo|midp|mmp|mobile.+firefox|netfront|opera m(ob|in)i|palm( os)?|phone|p(ixi|re)\/|plucker|pocket|psp|series(4|6)0|symbian|treo|up\.(browser|link)|vodafone|wap|windows (ce|phone)|xda|xiino/i.test(a)||/1207|6310|6590|3gso|4thp|50[1-6]i|770s|802s|a wa|abac|ac(er|oo|s\-)|ai(ko|rn)|al(av|ca|co)|amoi|an(ex|ny|yw)|aptu|ar(ch|go)|as(te|us)|attw|au(di|\-m|r |s )|avan|be(ck|ll|nq)|bi(lb|rd)|bl(ac|az)|br(e|v)w|bumb|bw\-(n|u)|c55\/|capi|ccwa|cdm\-|cell|chtm|cldc|cmd\-|co(mp|nd)|craw|da(it|ll|ng)|dbte|dc\-s|devi|dica|dmob|do(c|p)o|ds(12|\-d)|el(49|ai)|em(l2|ul)|er(ic|k0)|esl8|ez([4-7]0|os|wa|ze)|fetc|fly(\-|_)|g1 u|g560|gene|gf\-5|g\-mo|go(\.w|od)|gr(ad|un)|haie|hcit|hd\-(m|p|t)|hei\-|hi(pt|ta)|hp( i|ip)|hs\-c|ht(c(\-| |_|a|g|p|s|t)|tp)|hu(aw|tc)|i\-(20|go|ma)|i230|iac( |\-|\/)|ibro|idea|ig01|ikom|im1k|inno|ipaq|iris|ja(t|v)a|jbro|jemu|jigs|kddi|keji|kgt( |\/)|klon|kpt |kwc\-|kyo(c|k)|le(no|xi)|lg( g|\/(k|l|u)|50|54|\-[a-w])|libw|lynx|m1\-w|m3ga|m50\/|ma(te|ui|xo)|mc(01|21|ca)|m\-cr|me(rc|ri)|mi(o8|oa|ts)|mmef|mo(01|02|bi|de|do|t(\-| |o|v)|zz)|mt(50|p1|v )|mwbp|mywa|n10[0-2]|n20[2-3]|n30(0|2)|n50(0|2|5)|n7(0(0|1)|10)|ne((c|m)\-|on|tf|wf|wg|wt)|nok(6|i)|nzph|o2im|op(ti|wv)|oran|owg1|p800|pan(a|d|t)|pdxg|pg(13|\-([1-8]|c))|phil|pire|pl(ay|uc)|pn\-2|po(ck|rt|se)|prox|psio|pt\-g|qa\-a|qc(07|12|21|32|60|\-[2-7]|i\-)|qtek|r380|r600|raks|rim9|ro(ve|zo)|s55\/|sa(ge|ma|mm|ms|ny|va)|sc(01|h\-|oo|p\-)|sdk\/|se(c(\-|0|1)|47|mc|nd|ri)|sgh\-|shar|sie(\-|m)|sk\-0|sl(45|id)|sm(al|ar|b3|it|t5)|so(ft|ny)|sp(01|h\-|v\-|v )|sy(01|mb)|t2(18|50)|t6(00|10|18)|ta(gt|lk)|tcl\-|tdg\-|tel(i|m)|tim\-|t\-mo|to(pl|sh)|ts(70|m\-|m3|m5)|tx\-9|up(\.b|g1|si)|utst|v400|v750|veri|vi(rg|te)|vk(40|5[0-3]|\-v)|vm40|voda|vulc|vx(52|53|60|61|70|80|81|83|85|98)|w3c(\-| )|webc|whit|wi(g |nc|nw)|wmlb|wonu|x700|yas\-|your|zeto|zte\-/i.test(a.substr(0,4));
}
0
5
<script>
  function checkIsMobile(){
      if(navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Mobile") > 0){
        return true;
      }else{
        return false;
      }
   }
</script>

If you goto any browser and if you try to get navigator.userAgent then we'll be getting the browser information something like following

Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_13_1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/64.0.3282.186 Safari/537.36

The same thing if you do in mobile you'll be getting following

Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 8.1.0; Pixel Build/OPP6.171019.012) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/61.0.3163.98 Mobile Safari/537.36

Every mobile browser will have useragent with string containing "Mobile" So I'm using above snippet in my code to check whether current user agent is web/mobile. Based on the result I'll be doing required changes.

4

I use this

if(navigator.userAgent.search("mobile")>0 ){
         do something here
}
4

How about mobiledetect.net?

Other solutions seem too basic. This is a lightweight PHP class. It uses the User-Agent string combined with specific HTTP headers to detect the mobile environment. You can also benefit from Mobile Detect by using any of the 3rd party plugins available for: WordPress, Drupal, Joomla, Magento, etc.

2
  • Because the question asked for jQuery? Apr 10, 2018 at 15:41
  • how accurate is the PHP script? is it any more accurate than detecting on the clients end?
    – oldboy
    Nov 13, 2020 at 7:37

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