1027

I try to check a radio button with jQuery. Here's my code:

<form>
    <div id='type'>
        <input type='radio' id='radio_1' name='type' value='1' />
        <input type='radio' id='radio_2' name='type' value='2' />
        <input type='radio' id='radio_3' name='type' value='3' /> 
    </div>
</form>

And the JavaScript:

jQuery("#radio_1").attr('checked', true);

Doesn't work:

jQuery("input[value='1']").attr('checked', true);

Doesn't work:

jQuery('input:radio[name="type"]').filter('[value="1"]').attr('checked', true);

Doesn't work:

Do you have another idea? What am I missing?

1
  • 1
    Thanks for your responses! I found the problem. Actually, the two first ways to do it are working. The point is I used jqueryUI to transform a set of 3 radio buttons into a button set with this code : jQuery("#type").buttonset(); but making this change before checking the radio was breaking the radio set (don't know why). Finally, I put the buttonset call after checking the radio and it works impeccably.
    – Alexis
    Apr 14, 2011 at 18:43

33 Answers 33

1685

For versions of jQuery equal or above (>=) 1.6, use:

$("#radio_1").prop("checked", true);

For versions prior to (<) 1.6, use:

$("#radio_1").attr('checked', 'checked');

Tip: You may also want to call click() or change() on the radio button afterwards. See comments for more info.

3
  • 84
    In jQuery 1.9 or higher this solution won't work. Use $("#radio_1").prop("checked", true); instead.
    – installero
    Mar 15, 2013 at 18:48
  • 44
    It helpful to add .change() to the end to trigger any other events on the page.
    – Foxinni
    Sep 17, 2013 at 10:44
  • 34
    If you want the other radio buttons in the radio group to update properly use $("#radio_1").prop("checked", true).trigger("click"); Mar 29, 2016 at 13:52
303

Try this.

In this example, I'm targeting it with its input name and value

$("input[name=background][value='some value']").prop("checked",true);

Good to know: in case of multi-word value, it will work because of apostrophes, too.

3
  • For some reason this one worked for me for one troublesome radio group when just using the ID didn't work.
    – Michael K
    Apr 14, 2022 at 18:46
  • @MichaelK maybe there's another element that has same id and it is not an input type? Apr 15, 2022 at 19:08
  • I looked for that, but there is nothing else with the same id. It is strange. I notice in the source I have "checked" for the originally checked radio button. But in the inspector I see it is checked="" so I wonder if that difference means anything.
    – Michael K
    Apr 19, 2022 at 16:58
101

Short and easy to read option:

$("#radio_1").is(":checked")

It returns true or false, so you can use it in "if" statement.

1
  • 7
    Thanks! This is what I was looking for, but (FYI) the OP was asking how to SET the radio button, not get the value. (The word "check" made the question confusing.)
    – Bampfer
    May 14, 2015 at 21:54
98

One more function prop() that is added in jQuery 1.6, that serves the same purpose.

$("#radio_1").prop("checked", true); 
1
  • 15
    the attr('checked', true) stopped working for me with jQuery 1.9, this is the solution!
    – Pascal
    Feb 26, 2013 at 15:40
36

Try this.

To check Radio button using Value use this.

$('input[name=type][value=2]').attr('checked', true); 

Or

$('input[name=type][value=2]').attr('checked', 'checked');

Or

$('input[name=type][value=2]').prop('checked', 'checked');

To check Radio button using ID use this.

$('#radio_1').attr('checked','checked');

Or

$('#radio_1').prop('checked','checked');
24

Use prop() mehtod

enter image description here

Source Link

<p>
    <h5>Radio Selection</h5>

    <label>
        <input type="radio" name="myRadio" value="1"> Option 1
    </label>
    <label>
        <input type="radio" name="myRadio" value="2"> Option 2
    </label>
    <label>
        <input type="radio" name="myRadio" value="3"> Option 3
    </label>
</p>

<p>
    <button>Check Radio Option 2</button>
</p>


<script>
    $(function () {

        $("button").click(function () {
            $("input:radio[value='2']").prop('checked',true);
        });

    });
</script>
17

The $.prop way is better:

$(document).ready(function () {                            
    $("#radio_1").prop('checked', true);        
});

and you can test it like the following:

$(document).ready(function () {                            
    $("#radio_1, #radio_2", "#radio_3").change(function () {
        if ($("#radio_1").is(":checked")) {
            $('#div1').show();
        }
        else if ($("#radio_2").is(":checked")) {
            $('#div2').show();
        }
        else 
            $('#div3').show();
    });        
});
0
17

Try This:

$("input[name=type]").val(['1']);

http://jsfiddle.net/nwo706xw/

1
  • Importantly .val(['1']) not .val('1')
    – Bob Stein
    Sep 14, 2016 at 17:15
16

Surprisingly, the most popular and accepted answer ignores triggering appropriate event despite of the comments. Make sure you invoke .change(), otherwise all the "on change" bindings will ignore this event.

$("#radio_1").prop("checked", true).change();
0
9

You have to do

jQuery("#radio_1").attr('checked', 'checked');

That's the HTML attribute

9

This answer is thanks to Paul LeBeau in a comment. I thought I'd write it up as a proper answer since there surprisingly wasn't one.

The only thing that worked for me (jQuery 1.12.4, Chrome 86) was:

$(".js-my-radio-button").trigger("click");

This does everything I want – changes which radio button looks selected (both visually and programmatically) and triggers events such as change on the radio button.

Just setting the "checked" attribute as other answers suggest would not change which radio button was selected for me.

7

If property name does not work don't forget that id still exists. This answer is for people who wants to target the id here how you do.

$('input[id=element_id][value=element_value]').prop("checked",true);

Because property name does not work for me. Make sure you don't surround id and name with double/single quotations.

Cheers!

7
$("input[name=inputname]:radio").click(function() {
    if($(this).attr("value")=="yes") {
        $(".inputclassname").show();
    }
    if($(this).attr("value")=="no") {
        $(".inputclassname").hide();
    }
});
7

We should want to tell it is a radio button.So please try with following code.

$("input[type='radio'][name='userRadionButtonName']").prop('checked', true);
7

Yes, it worked for me like a way:

$("#radio_1").attr('checked', 'checked');
7

Just in case anyone is trying to achieve this while using jQuery UI, you will also need to refresh the UI checkbox object to reflect the updated value:

$("#option2").prop("checked", true); // Check id option2
$("input[name='radio_options']").button("refresh"); // Refresh button set
7

Try this

$(document).ready(function(){
    $("input[name='type']:radio").change(function(){
        if($(this).val() == '1')
        {
          // do something
        }
        else if($(this).val() == '2')
        {
          // do something
        }
        else if($(this).val() == '3')
        {
          // do something
        }
    });
});
6

Get value:

$("[name='type'][checked]").attr("value");

Set value:

$(this).attr({"checked":true}).prop({"checked":true});

Radio Button click add attr checked:

$("[name='type']").click(function(){
  $("[name='type']").removeAttr("checked");
  $(this).attr({"checked":true}).prop({"checked":true});
});
6

Try this with example

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form id="myForm">
<input type="radio" name="radio" value="first"/> 1 <br/>
<input type="radio" name="radio" value="second"/> 2 <br/>
</form>


<script>
$(document).ready(function () {
    $('#myForm').on('click', function () {
        var value = $("[name=radio]:checked").val();

        alert(value);
    })
});
</script>
5

I use this code:

I'm sorry for English.

var $j = jQuery.noConflict();

$j(function() {
    // add handler
    $j('#radio-1, #radio-2').click(function(){

        // find all checked and cancel checked
        $j('input:radio:checked').prop('checked', false);

        // this radio add cheked
        $j(this).prop('checked', true);
    });
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<fieldset class="section">
  <legend>Radio buttons</legend>
  <label>
    <input type="radio" id="radio-1" checked>
    Option one is this and that&mdash;be sure to include why it's great
  </label>
  <br>
  <label>
    <input type="radio" id="radio-2">
    Option two can be something else
  </label>
</fieldset>

0
4

Try this

var isChecked = $("#radio_1")[0].checked;
0
4

I've just have a similar problem, a simple solution is to just use:

.click()

Any other solution will work if you refresh radio after calling function.

1
  • 1
    call click sometimes is a headache in ie9 Oct 27, 2016 at 18:05
4
function rbcitiSelction(e) {
     debugger
    $('#trpersonalemail').hide();
    $('#trcitiemail').show();
}

function rbpersSelction(e) {
    var personalEmail = $(e).val();
    $('#trpersonalemail').show();
    $('#trcitiemail').hide();
}

$(function() {  
    $("#citiEmail").prop("checked", true)
});
4

In addition, you can check if the element is checked or not:

if ($('.myCheckbox').attr('checked'))
{
   //do others stuff
}
else
{
   //do others stuff
}

You can checked for unchecked element:

$('.myCheckbox').attr('checked',true) //Standards way

You can also uncheck this way:

$('.myCheckbox').removeAttr('checked')

You can checked for radio button:

For versions of jQuery equal or above (>=) 1.6, use:

$("#radio_1").prop("checked", true);

For versions prior to (<) 1.6, use:

$("#radio_1").attr('checked', 'checked');
3
$("#radio_1").attr('checked', true);
//or
$("#radio_1").attr('checked', 'checked');
2
  • 2
    $("#radio_1").attr('checked', true); this won't work. As mentioned by the OP
    – JohnP
    Apr 14, 2011 at 15:53
  • 2
    Please explain the code in your answers, and read the question (this has been tried) Apr 12, 2014 at 20:48
3

I got some related example to be enhanced, how about if I want to add a new condition, lets say, if I want colour scheme to be hidden after I click on project Status value except Pavers and Paving Slabs.

Example is in here:

$(function () {
    $('#CostAnalysis input[type=radio]').click(function () {
        var value = $(this).val();

        if (value == "Supply & Lay") {
            $('#ul-suplay').empty();
            $('#ul-suplay').append('<fieldset data-role="controlgroup"> \

http://jsfiddle.net/m7hg2p94/4/

3

attr accepts two strings.

The correct way is:

jQuery("#radio_1").attr('checked', 'true');
3

I used jquery-1.11.3.js

Basic Enable & disable

Tips 1: (Radio button type common Disable & Enable)

$("input[type=radio]").attr('disabled', false);
$("input[type=radio]").attr('disabled', true); 

Tips 2: ( ID selector Using prop() or attr())

$("#paytmradio").prop("checked", true);
$("#sbiradio").prop("checked", false);

jQuery("#paytmradio").attr('checked', 'checked'); // or true this won't work
jQuery("#sbiradio").attr('checked', false);

Tips 3: ( Class selector Using prop() or arrt())

$(".paytm").prop("checked", true);
$(".sbi").prop("checked", false);

jQuery(".paytm").attr('checked', 'checked'); // or true
jQuery(".sbi").attr('checked', false);

OTHER TIPS

$("#paytmradio").is(":checked")   // Checking is checked or not
$(':radio:not(:checked)').attr('disabled', true); // All not check radio button disabled

$('input[name=payment_type][value=1]').attr('checked', 'checked'); //input type via checked
 $("input:checked", "#paytmradio").val() // get the checked value

index.html

<div class="col-md-6">      
    <label class="control-label" for="paymenttype">Payment Type <span style="color:red">*</span></label>
    <div id="paymenttype" class="form-group" style="padding-top: inherit;">
        <label class="radio-inline" class="form-control"><input  type="radio" id="paytmradio"  class="paytm" name="paymenttype" value="1" onclick="document.getElementById('paymentFrm').action='paytmTest.php';">PayTM</label>
        <label class="radio-inline" class="form-control"><input  type="radio" id="sbiradio" class="sbi" name="paymenttype" value="2" onclick="document.getElementById('paymentFrm').action='sbiTest.php';">SBI ePAY</label>
    </div>
</div>
2

try this

 $("input:checked", "#radioButton").val()

if checked returns True if not checked returns False

jQuery v1.10.1
2

Some times above solutions do not work, then you can try below:

jQuery.uniform.update(jQuery("#yourElementID").attr('checked',true));
jQuery.uniform.update(jQuery("#yourElementID").attr('checked',false));

Another way you can try is:

jQuery("input:radio[name=yourElementName]:nth(0)").attr('checked',true);
1
  • 1
    Uniform is a jQuery plugin that makes forms prettier, but it does that by adding extra elements. Whenever I update the checked value, the extra element state is not updated, leading to an invisible input that is not checked, but with a visible background element that looks checked. jQuery.uniform.update() is the solution! Sep 19, 2014 at 23:42

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