478

I see this only in Chrome.

The full error message reads:

"org.openqa.selenium.WebDriverException: Element is not clickable at point (411, 675). Other element would receive the click: ..."

The element that 'would receive the click' is to the side of the element in question, not on top of it and not overlapping it, not moving around the page.

I have tried adding an offset, but that does not work either. The item is on the displayed window without any need for scrolling.

10
  • 3
    Do you wait for page to load? Maybe other element overlap it while the page is loading?
    – Herokiller
    Aug 13, 2012 at 5:27
  • 69
    Long story short for those just arriving - THE ELEMENT IS NOT VISIBLE ON THE PAGE AND THEREFORE IS NOT CLICKABLE. YOU NEED TO SCROLL THE VIEWPORT BY EMITTING window.ScrollTo. Apr 16, 2014 at 16:02
  • 74
    @ChrisB.Behrens This isn't always the case. This particular error can also be given when an element is covered by another. I had this exception when trying to click a button that was being another element with postion fixed. Jun 13, 2014 at 12:56
  • 4
    Its not only Chromedriver- had the same problem with Firefox. I fixed the problem by implementing a delay to wait till the page has fully reloaded, as suggested by others above.
    – codervince
    Mar 13, 2016 at 2:47
  • 8
    I think this is absolutely wrong advice to emit scrollTo or make any waits. Looks like the algorithm of selenium click is: 1. calculate element position 2. scrollTo this position (so you don't need to issue it yourself) 3. click to this position (exception comes from last assertion which checks what element stands on this position just before actual click event sending) My advices are: 1. check if element is inside your viewport. 2. check if element is covered by any other (like sticky menus), hide them if there are any, or scroll manually before click without relying on builtin scrollTo. Mar 18, 2016 at 12:19

54 Answers 54

390

This is caused by following 3 types:

1. The element is not visible to click.

Use Actions or JavascriptExecutor for making it to click.

By Actions:

WebElement element = driver.findElement(By("element_path"));

Actions actions = new Actions(driver);

actions.moveToElement(element).click().perform();

By JavascriptExecutor:

JavascriptExecutor jse = (JavascriptExecutor)driver;

jse.executeScript("scroll(250, 0)"); // if the element is on top.

jse.executeScript("scroll(0, 250)"); // if the element is on bottom.

or

JavascriptExecutor jse = (JavascriptExecutor)driver;

jse.executeScript("arguments[0].scrollIntoView()", Webelement); 

Then click on the element.

2. The page is getting refreshed before it is clicking the element.

For this, make the page to wait for few seconds.

3. The element is clickable but there is a spinner/overlay on top of it

The below code will wait until the overlay disppears

By loadingImage = By.id("loading image ID");

WebDriverWait wait = new WebDriverWait(driver, timeOutInSeconds);

wait.until(ExpectedConditions.invisibilityOfElementLocated(loadingImage));

Then click on the element.

16
  • 62
    There is a third type of cause, which is that your element is wrapped in a div or a span. The page can be fully loaded, and completely within the viewport, but Chromedriver will refuse to click it, where the webdriver for FF and IE have no issue. A real human has no clue that the span exists, and the browser doesn't care when you actually click it, as a human. Neither moving around, nor waiting will solve this issue; either avoid Chrome/chromedriver, or rewrite the page's HTML seem to be the only options for people in case 3.
    – Don Simon
    May 21, 2015 at 16:32
  • 62
    @DonSimon I had the same issue that you did. I was able to get around it by using .SendKeys(Keys.Return) instead of .Click. This worked for me in Chrome where I was having this issue and in Firefox where I was having another similar issue on this particular link (anchor wrapped in a Div). Jul 8, 2015 at 18:47
  • 23
    The solution suggested by @PeterBernier works well in the case where the element is wrapped in a div or a span. In Python I used .send_keys('\n') to simulate the click and work around the issue in Chrome.
    – G-J
    Feb 16, 2016 at 18:07
  • 4
    If an element is hidden by a div element the following code fixes it. executeJavascript("arguments[0].click();", selenium.findElement(locator)); Jul 13, 2016 at 16:14
  • 1
    @PeterBernier answer is working like a charm in C#, SendKeys is perfect when the element is wrapped by DIV in my case. Thanks!
    – gatsby
    Aug 31, 2023 at 6:29
90

You can also use JavaScript click and scrolling would be not required then.

IJavaScriptExecutor ex = (IJavaScriptExecutor)Driver;
ex.ExecuteScript("arguments[0].click();", elementToClick);
8
  • 7
    Unbelievable! I wonder why selenium does not trash the click() method that they provide, given that there are conditions in which isDisplayed() and isEnabled() are not enough to click on an element, and this seems the only one solution. Thanks! Aug 20, 2017 at 17:50
  • 3
    +1: This is the solution that worked for me. actions.MoveToElement didn't work for me in C# and the other scrolling solutions seemed a little fragile in that there was a chance the scrolling might not correctly get the element into view or the element's position on the page could change.
    – User
    Oct 1, 2017 at 5:32
  • 3
    this solution is the easiest if the element is not in view, but exists on the page Oct 6, 2017 at 6:39
  • @Giovanni Bitliner They do not provide this method since it is not a real user scenario. Users should also have to wait till the loader disappears. I think thats a wonderfull thing about selenium. Oct 30, 2017 at 8:41
  • +1 Also worked for me. Just made added flwg method to my code: ` private void jsClick(IWebElement element, IWebDriver driver) { IJavaScriptExecutor ex = (IJavaScriptExecutor)driver; ex.ExecuteScript("arguments[0].click();", element); } ` invoked this way: 'jsClick(driver.FindElement(By.XPath("xpathOfTheElement"))); `
    – Jeremias
    Nov 17, 2017 at 11:28
50

There seems to be a bug in chromedriver for that (the problem is that it's marked as won't fix) --> GitHub Link

(place a bounty on FreedomSponsors perhaps?)

There's a workaround suggested at comment #27. Maybe it'll work for you-

4
  • 5
    Seems fair - if the button isn't on the screen then it isn't really clickable. Oct 17, 2013 at 8:19
  • 1
    This is not a bug. This is intended behaviour and it is correct. As other suggested, if element is outside of viewport - you need to scroll to it. May 6, 2015 at 6:10
  • I tried Firefox and found it did not give this error, yet the click was still ignored. It turned out to be the a parent div had a height of zero. Once that was fixed both worked fine.
    – dansalmo
    Jun 28, 2017 at 21:13
  • There I found this method that solved it for me (on Chrome) self.browser.execute_script("arguments[0].click();", item) Aug 23, 2020 at 4:56
40

I had the same issue, tried all offered solutions but they did not work for me. eventually I used this:

JavascriptExecutor js = (JavascriptExecutor) driver;
js.executeScript("var evt = document.createEvent('MouseEvents');" + "evt.initMouseEvent('click',true, true, window, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, false, false, false, false, 0,null);" + "arguments[0].dispatchEvent(evt);", findElement(element));

Hope this helps

2
  • 1
    This worked for div overlay and flex elements in chrome. Nothing else suggested on this page worked. Jan 11, 2022 at 15:23
  • I previously used arguments[0].click, but it failed in some cases. As noted above, this worked even in these cases.
    – serv-inc
    Nov 13, 2023 at 15:32
24

Wow, a lot of answers here, and many good ones.

I hope I'll add something to this from my experience.

Well guys, in my case there was a cookie overlay hiding the element occasionally. Scrolling to the element also works; but in my humble opinion (for my case, not a panacea for everyone) the simplest solution is just to go full screen (I was running my scripts on a 3/4 of the screen window)! So here we go:

driver.manage().window().maximize();

Hope that helps!

1
  • Worked for me too but unfortunately, Chrome is still not finding the element sometimes.
    – Alam
    Mar 8, 2021 at 0:43
20

You need to use focus or scroll on that element. You also might have to use explict wait.

WebElement firstbutton= driver.findElement(By.xpath("Your Element"));
Actions actions = new Actions(driver);
actions.moveToElement(element);
actions.perform();

OR

The element is not clickable because of a Spinner/Overlay on top of it:

By loadingImage = By.id("loading image ID");
WebDriverWait wait = new WebDriverWait(driver, timeOutInSeconds);
wait.until(ExpectedConditions.invisibilityOfElementLocated(loadingImage));

OR

Point p= element.getLocation();
Actions actions = new Actions(driver);
actions.moveToElement(element).movebyoffset(p.x,p.y).click().perform();

OR

If still not work use JavascriptExecutor

JavascriptExecutor executor = (JavascriptExecutor)driver;
executor.executeScript("arguments[0].click();", firstbutton);
2
  • 1
    Point p= element.getLocation(); Actions actions = new Actions(driver); actions.moveToElement(element).movebyoffset(p.x,p.y).click().perform(); This worked for me,Thanks Apr 7, 2021 at 6:40
  • I glad it helps you .. thanks for the comment Apr 7, 2021 at 6:44
15

I have seen this in the situation when the selenium driven Chrome window was opened too small. The element to be clicked on was out of the viewport and therefore it was failing.

That sounds logical... real user would have to either resize the window or scroll so that it is possible to see the element and in fact click on it.

After instructing the selenium driver to set the window size appropriately this issues went away for me. The webdriver API is decribed here.

0
13

I, too, wrestled with this problem. Code works fine in FF, fails on Chrome. What I was trying to do was to click a tickbox - if it wasn't in view, I'd scroll to view and then click. Even scrolling into view works in Chrome, only the bottom few pixels of the tickbox wasn't visible so webdriver refused to click on it.

My workaround is this:

WebElement element = _sectorPopup.findElement(...);

((Locatable) element).getCoordinates().inViewPort();
try {
    element.click();
} catch (Exception e) {
    new Actions(getWebDriver()).sendKeys(Keys.PAGE_DOWN).perform();
    element.click();
}

Chrome also has issues with sendKeys, using Actions is sometimes necessary. Obviously, you need to know which direction and how much you need to go so your mileage may vary. But I prefer this to the javascript hack, so I'm posting it here in case someone else will find it useful.

1
  • Locatable is deprecated. Dec 20, 2017 at 14:15
13

I was getting this error when running tests headless with xvfb-run. They were working flawlessly locally. Using chrome, versions of webdriver / chromedriver / chrome / java etc all identical.

The ‘won’t fix’ bug in chromedriver - GitHub Link pointed out by Tony Lâmpada suggested this may be related to what is / isn't visible on the screen.

Help message for xvfb-run shows the following:

-s ARGS   --server-args=ARGS    arguments (other than server number and
                                "-nolisten tcp") to pass to the Xvfb server
                                (default: "-screen 0 640x480x8")

Changing the resolution for xvfb made the error go away:

xvfb-run -s "-screen 0 1280x1024x16" ...
0
12

ruby/watir-webdriver/chrome

I use the following trick and seems like it works:

#scroll to myelement
@browser.execute_script "window.scrollTo(#{myelement.element.wd.location[0]},#{myelement.element.wd.location[1]})"

# click myelement
myelement.when_present.fire_event("click")
2
  • 1
    The issue I was seeing was with an area map. The error was the same as the original post here - a div "in front of" the area I needed to click. It was not an AJAX/timing/page load issue, and the area was in full view - I could not even scroll to focus on it. However, changing my click method from object.click to object.fire_event("click") seems to have resolved the issue for me. I left it in a begin/rescue block so that it would not possibly affect how Firefox is clicking normally.
    – adam reed
    Jun 28, 2013 at 17:04
  • This approach worked around the issue for me when there were elements not visible in the viewport. Apr 24, 2018 at 1:07
10

First, try to get the latest Chrome driver and check if it solves the issue.

In my case, it didn't fix the issue. But, the following solution worked for me so far. The following is C# code but you can follow same logic in your specific language. What we do here is,

Step 1: Focus on the element using the Selenium Actions object,

Step 2: Then do a click on the element

Step 3: If there's an exception, then we trigger a javascript "Click" event on the element by executing the javascript script through the Selenium browser driver's "ExecuteScript" method.

You can also skip step 1 and 2 and try only step 3 too. Step 3 would work on it's own but I noticed some strange behavior in one scenario in which step 3, even though it successfully clicked the element, caused unexpected behavior in other parts of my code after clicking the element.

            try
            {
                //Setup the driver and navigate to the web page...
                var driver = new ChromeDriver("folder path to the Chrome driver");
                driver.Navigate().GoToUrl("UrlToThePage");

                //Find the element...
                var element = driver.FindElement(By.Id("elementHtmlId")); 

                //Step 1
                new Actions(driver).MoveToElement(element).Perform();  

                //Step 2
                element.Click();
            }
            catch (Exception)
            {
                //Step 3
                driver.ExecuteScript("document.getElementById('elementHtmlId').click();");

            }
2
  • I was having this same issue. Your step 1 of using the Actions class works great. I would have never thought of this. Thanks!
    – Conner
    Sep 24, 2014 at 19:25
  • Your first step is a great solution. Sep 10, 2019 at 3:42
10

I was getting the same issue while running selenium script in python. Here is what I used to click on the element:

from selenium.webdriver.common.action_chains import ActionChains


ActionChains(driver).click(element).perform()
0
9

When using Protractor this helped me:

var elm = element(by.css('.your-css-class'));
browser.executeScript("arguments[0].scrollIntoView();", elm.getWebElement());
elm.click();
7

I made this method based on a comment from Tony Lâmpada's answer. It works very well.

def scroll_to(element)
  page.execute_script("window.scrollTo(#{element.native.location.x}, #{element.native.location.y})")
end
0
5

Today I got the same kind of issue. You don't believe me if i say how i solved the issue.

By maximizing the browser size

Yes, it is a pointer issue that means the size of the browser. For that, you just need to maximize the window size manually or through the code.

2
  • Can you post the code?
    – ndtreviv
    Nov 3, 2021 at 12:04
  • It is one of the ways to maximize the browser size. browser.maximize_window(). if not, google it like maximize the browser size using selenium. you will find many solutions Nov 5, 2021 at 0:55
4

I was facing a similar problem whre i have to check two check boxes one after the other.But i was getting the same above error.hence i added wait in between my steps for checking the checkboxes....its working fine and great.here are the steps:-

  When I visit /administrator/user_profiles
  And I press xpath link "//*[@id='1']"
  Then I should see "Please wait for a moment..."
  When I wait for 5 seconds
  And I press xpath link "//*[@id='2']"
  Then I should see "Please wait for a moment..."
  When I visit /administrator/user_profiles_updates
1
  • Just adding that this is not the proper way to use Gherkin syntax. Steps should be in the form "given - when - then" and these should not be mixed. If more "whens" are needed after a "then", probably a separate test case is needed.
    – Floella
    Aug 20, 2019 at 18:03
4

The reason for this error is that the element that you are trying to click is not in the viewport (region seen by the user) of the browser. So the way to overcome this is by scrolling to the desired element first and then performing the click.

Javascript:

async scrollTo (webElement) {
    await this.driver.executeScript('arguments[0].scrollIntoView(true)', webElement)
    await this.driver.executeScript('window.scrollBy(0,-150)')
}

Java:

public void scrollTo (WebElement e) {
    JavascriptExecutor js = (JavascriptExecutor) driver; 
    js.executeAsyncScript('arguments[0].scrollIntoView(true)', e)
    js.executeAsyncScript('window.scrollBy(0,-150)')
}
3

Apparently this is the result of a "Won't Fix" bug in the Chrome driver binary.

One solution that worked for me (Our Mileage May Vary) can be found in this Google Group discussion, Comment #3:

https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/selenium-developer-activity/DsZ5wFN52tc

The relevant portion is right here:

I've since worked around the issue by navigating directly to the href of the parent anchor of the span.

driver.Navigate().GoToUrl(driver.FindElement(By.Id(embeddedSpanIdToClick)).FindElement(By.XPath("..")).GetAttribute("href"));

In my case, I'm using Python, so once I got the desired element, I simply used

driver.get(ViewElm.get_attribute('href'))

I would expect this to only work, however, if the element you are trying to click on is a link...

3

Re Tony Lâmpada's answer, comment #27 did indeed solve the problem for me, except that it provided Java code and I needed Python. Here's a Python function that scrolls to the element's position and then clicks it.

def scroll_to_and_click(xpath):
    element = TestUtil.driver.find_element_by_xpath(xpath)
    TestUtil.driver.execute_script('window.scrollTo(0, ' + str(element.location['y']) + ');')
    element.click()

This solved the problem for me in Chrome 34.0. It caused no harm in Firefox 28.0 and IE 11; those browsers aren't subject to the problem, but scrolling to the element's position before clicking it still isn't a bad thing.

3

This might happen if the element changes position while the driver is attempting to click it (I've seen this with IE too). The driver retains the initial position but by the time it actually gets to clicking on it, that position is no longer pointing to that element. The FireFox driver doesn't have this problem BTW, apparently it "clicks" elements programmatically.

Anyway, this can happen when you use animations or simply change the height of elements dynamically (e.g. $("#foo").height(500)). You need to make sure that you only click elements after their height has "settled". I ended up with code that looks like this (C# bindings):

if (!(driver is FirefoxDriver))
{
    new WebDriverWait(driver, TimeSpan.FromSeconds(10)).Until(
        d => d.FindElement(By.Id(someDynamicDiv)).Size.Height > initialSize);
}

In case of an animation or any other factor you can't easily query for, you can utilize a "generic" method that waits for the element to be stationary:

var prevLocation = new Point(Int32.MinValue, Int32.MinValue);
int stationaryCount = 0;
int desiredStationarySamples = 6; //3 seconds in total since the default interval is 500ms
return new WebDriverWait(driver, timeout).Until(d => 
{
    var e = driver.FindElement(By.Id(someId));
    if (e.Location == prevLocation)
    {
        stationaryCount++;
        return stationaryCount == desiredStationarySamples;
    }

    prevLocation = e.Location;
    stationaryCount = 0;
    return false;
});
1
  • This appears to be what I'm experiencing. I intermittently get the OP's "Other Element would..." exception, but screenshots show the modal is on the screen and element is not covered and I use waits before clicking. Turns out when the modal I'm clicking opens it actually slides down the page. Depending on when the selenium wait actual samples the DOM, the exception can be thrown if it caught the modal as it was moving. Sep 16, 2016 at 12:50
3

I met this because a loading dialog cover on this element. I simplely solve it by add a waiting before working with the this element.

try {
        Thread.sleep((int) (3000));
    } catch (InterruptedException e) {
        //
        e.printStackTrace();
    }

Hope this help!

0
3

Explanation of error message:

The error message simply says, that the element you want to click on is present, but it is not visible. It could be covered by something or temporary not visible.

There could be many reasons why the element is not visible in the moment of the test. Please re-analyse your page and find proper solution for your case.

Solution for particular case:

In my case, this error occures, when a tooltip of the screen element i just clicked on, was poping over the element I wanted to click next. Defocus was a solution I needed.

  • Quick solution how to defocus would be to click to some other element in another part of the screen which does "nothing" resp. nothing happens after a click action.
  • Proper solution would be to call element.blur() on the element poping the tooltip, which would make the tooltip disapear.
3

If you have jQuery loaded on the page, you can execute the following javascript command:

"$('#" + element_id + "').click()"

Example using python executor:

driver.execute_script("$('#%s').click()" % element_id)
2

I was facing the same problem with clj-webdriver (clojure port of Selenium). I just translated the previous solution to clojure for convenience. You can call this function before doing click or whatever to avoid that problem.

(defn scrollTo
  "Scrolls to the position of the given css selector if found"
  [q]
  (if (exists? q) 
    (let [ loc (location-once-visible q) jscript (str "window.scrollTo(" (:x loc) "," (:y loc) ")") ] 
      (execute-script jscript))))
2

Maybe it's not really clean solution but it works:

try:
    el.click()
except WebDriverException as e:
    if 'Element is not clickable at point' in e.msg:
        self.browser.execute_script(
            '$("{sel}").click()'.format(sel=el_selector)
        )
    else:
        raise
2

I was getting this bug because I tested a hover and then needed to click on the link underneath the tooltip. The solution was to add page.find('.sp-logo').hover before click_link to get the tooltip out of the way.

2

It's funny, all the time I spent looking at the various responses, no one had tried the obvious, which of course, I hadn't either. If your page has the same id used multiple times, as mine did, ("newButton",) and the one you want is not the first one found, then you will in all likelihood get this error. The easiest thing to do (C#):

var testIt = driver.FindElements(By.Id("newButton"));

Note it's FindElements, not FindElement.

And then test to see how many results came back from the retrieval. If it's the second one, you can then use:

testit[1].Click();

Or get whomever reused ids to fix them.

1
  • If this is because there are multiple buttons by that ID and only one is displayed at a time, a superior solution involves using LINQ to find the first element that is visible (append .First(x => x.Visible) to the FindElements call) and click on that if it's not null. Nov 5, 2015 at 18:48
2

After testing all mentioned suggestions, nothing worked. I made this code. It works, but is not beautiful

public void click(WebElement element) {
    //https://code.google.com/p/selenium/issues/detail?id=2766 (fix)
    while(true){
        try{
            element.click();
            break;
        }catch (Throwable e){
            try {
                Thread.sleep(200);
            } catch (InterruptedException e1) {
                e1.printStackTrace();
            }
        }
    }
}

public void click(String css) {
    //https://code.google.com/p/selenium/issues/detail?id=2766 (fix)
    while(true){
        try{
            driver.findElement(By.cssSelector(css)).click();
            break;
        }catch (Throwable e){
            try {
                Thread.sleep(200);
            } catch (InterruptedException e1) {
                e1.printStackTrace();
            }
        }
    }
}
2

I do a kind of brute force of clicks and it works for me.

try:
    elem.click()
except:
    print "failed to click"
    size = elem.size
    mid_of_y = int(size["height"])/2
    stepts_to_do_to_left = int(size["width"])
    while stepts_to_do_to_left > 0:
        try:
            print stepts_to_do_to_left, mid_of_y
            action = webdriver.common.action_chains.ActionChains(driver)
            action.move_to_element_with_offset(elem, mid_of_y, stepts_to_do_to_left)
            action.click()
            action.perform()
            print "DONE CLICK"
            break
        except:
            pass
2

Try to maximize the browser when you are working with resolutions greater than 1024x768.

driver.manage().window().maximize();

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