92

Looking to pull the category ID of a specific page in WordPress that is listing all posts using that specific category. Tried the below but not working. I am able to get the category name using single_term_title.

$category = single_term_title("", false);
$catid = get_cat_ID( $category );

$category is displaying "Entertainment" for example. But I also need the ID of "Entertainment". How would I go about this?

2
  • Is it a normal category page or custom page template?
    – calebds
    Jan 12, 2012 at 3:13
  • it is a custom taxonomy - trying to use this on a file named taxonomy-event-categories-entertainment.php
    – RonnieT
    Jan 12, 2012 at 3:32

13 Answers 13

212

If it is a category page,you can get id of current category by:

$category = get_category( get_query_var( 'cat' ) );
$cat_id = $category->cat_ID;

If you want to get category id of any particular category on any page, try using :

$category_id = get_cat_ID('Category Name');
7
  • 4
    Exactly what I was looking for. Better than the above answer if you are creating a generic Category template as you only get the Category the page will display as opposed to the multi-Category array from the above. Sep 25, 2012 at 16:59
  • It worked perfectly for me. I was having problem getting the ID and worked lovely for me. Saved hours :) Jul 12, 2013 at 16:35
  • 3
    Need to replace the correct answer! The answer marked correct, misled me.
    – Mosh Feu
    Jun 18, 2014 at 12:16
  • 14
    This answer has some unnecessary code. The first line of code gets the full category data in get_category function by using one parameter - CATEGORY ID (because this is what get_query_var( 'cat' ) returns). The second line of code actually retrieves the id from the data. This means that the get_category function is completely unused here and if someone wants only the id, then just get_query_var( 'cat' ) should be used! Aug 26, 2014 at 12:36
  • @RamMeharDeswal is it possible to use this method to get the child category ?
    – Rain Man
    Oct 30, 2015 at 1:30
79

You can try using get_the_category():

$categories = get_the_category();
$category_id = $categories[0]->cat_ID;
6
  • 16
    $category[0]->cat_ID to be accurate. Sep 3, 2012 at 18:25
  • 63
    This method actually checks the first category of the first post on the page. If there are no posts or if the first post has multiple categories, this will fail or return incorrect info. Nov 9, 2012 at 20:59
  • 5
    I agree with @JordanEldredge, this will return incorrect info.
    – Bill
    May 21, 2013 at 14:10
  • 3
    This will return the first category of the first post of the page.
    – Shaffe
    Feb 5, 2014 at 23:38
  • It will also fail if the viewed page is a subcategory. Check for the output of the $categories array.
    – Mooncake
    Apr 29, 2014 at 13:34
41

The oldest but fastest way you can use is:

$cat_id = get_query_var('cat');
5
  • this seems perfect. are there drawbacks to this over Ram Mehar Deswal's answer?
    – dewd
    Jan 27, 2014 at 15:38
  • This is actually the working solution, it will display the category of the viewed page.
    – Mooncake
    Apr 29, 2014 at 13:35
  • 1
    @dewd look for Bartosz Górski's comment in Ram Mehar Deswal's answer. He is completly right and this answer right here does all you need.
    – honk31
    Apr 20, 2015 at 18:14
  • @honk31 thx for pointing me to that you good SO citizen you! :)
    – dewd
    Apr 21, 2015 at 10:41
  • get_query_var( 'cat' ) is falsy for me
    – Dominic
    Dec 1, 2019 at 17:36
24

I use the get_queried_object function to get the current category on a category.php template page.

$current_category = get_queried_object();

Jordan Eldredge is right, get_the_category is not suitable here.

3
  • 1
    Nice, never seen this one before.
    – Drew Baker
    Sep 8, 2015 at 22:08
  • If the result is not the expected one, invoke wp_reset_query(); to restore the default WP_Query instance.
    – Shaffe
    Sep 9, 2015 at 23:49
  • This is actually the most useful Wordpress function I have ever found. It's usable everywhere: pages, articles, categories etc.
    – frodeborli
    Mar 29, 2016 at 9:32
4

I think some of the above may work but using the get_the_category function seems tricky and may give unexpected results.

I think the most direct and simple way to access the cat ID in a category page is:

$wp_query->query_vars['cat']

Cheers

1
  • Perfect! Thanks.
    – Beny
    Nov 20, 2018 at 16:25
2

if you need the category ID, you would get it via get_query_var, that is capable of retrieving all publicly queryble variables.

$category_id = get_query_var('cat');

here is an example to get the category name

$category_name = get_query_var('category_name');

and of course the all mighty get_queried_object

$queried_object = get_queried_object();

that is returning the complete taxonomy term object (when used on a taxonomy-archive page..)

2

I tested all these answers and this is the only one which works on all archive page types including posts page.

$category_id = get_the_category( get_the_ID());
$cat_id      = get_category($category_id[0]->term_id);
1

I found this question whilst looking for exactly what you asked. Unfortunately you have accepted an incorrect answer. For the sake of other people who are trying to achieve what we were trying to achieve, I thought I'd post the correct answer.

$cur_cat = get_cat_ID( single_cat_title("",false) );

As you said single_term_title("", false); was correctly returning the category title, I'm not sure why you would have had troubles with your code; but the above code works flawlessly for me.

1

I used this for breadcrums in the category template page:

$cat_obj = $wp_query->get_queried_object();
$thiscat_id = $cat_obj->term_id;
$thiscat = get_category($thiscat_id);
$parentcat = get_category($thiscat->parent);
1

Alternative -

 $catID = the_category_ID($echo=false);

EDIT: Above function is deprecated please use get_the_category()

1
  • FYI: This function has been deprecated.
    – Sagive
    Jul 18, 2017 at 15:32
0
$cats = wp_get_post_terms( $post->ID, 'product_cat' );
foreach($cats as $cat){
/*check for category having parent or not except category id=1 which is wordpress default category (Uncategorized)*/
  if($cat->parent != '0' && $cat->term_id != 1){
    echo '<h2 class="link"><a href="'.get_category_link($cat->term_id ).'">'.$cat->name.'</a></h2>';
    break;
  }
}
0

Tried above for solutions to find cat ID of a post, but nothing worked, used the following instead:

$obj = get_queried_object();
$c_id = wp_get_post_categories($obj->ID);
0

Here's an efficient method to get category meta data, along with HTML if you want to print it out on the front-end:

    <?php
    
    function custom_get_categories() {
      $categories = get_the_category();
      $uncategorised_id = get_cat_ID('Uncategorized');
      $custom_category_link = '';
    
      foreach ($categories as $category) {
        if($category->category_parent == $uncategorised_id || $category->cat_ID == $uncategorised_id) {
          continue;
        }
        
        $custom_category_link = get_category_link($category->cat_ID); ?>
    
        <a href ="<?php echo $custom_category_link ?>"> 
    <?php echo "\n\nCategory ID: " . $category->cat_ID . "\nCategory Name" . $category->name;  ?> </a>
    
        <?php
      }``
    }
    
     ?>
2
  • 2
    Hello Hemant Adhikari. Please separate the text from the code in your post.
    – Toni
    Sep 16, 2021 at 10:39
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    Sep 16, 2021 at 12:15

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