45

I have a page using something along the lines of

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;url=http://example.com/" />

but for certain users on a certain workstation this doesn't work. The is in IE. Is there something wrong with cookies or a setting somewhere which would cause this to fail? I never heard of such a thing.

2
  • Greg, you should show the context of your markup. What's above it? What's below it, etc.
    – Sampson
    Feb 6, 2009 at 22:09
  • Perhaps it’s a bug caused by invalid markup that it only occurs in this certain browser on this certain machine.
    – Gumbo
    Feb 6, 2009 at 22:10

7 Answers 7

77

The problem is that when IE sees this:

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;http://www.example.com" />

it expects the contents attribute to contain a number. The only time IE will check for a URL is if the content attribute contains "URL=" so the redirect that is most usable in all browsers is this:

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;URL=http://www.example.com" />

The above example would redirect immdetiately but if you changed the 0 for another number it would wait that many seconds. Hope this all makes sense, it should work just fine but I still think my first idea was the better one.

2
  • 1
    lol, i was having the same behaviour.. bad mistake forgetting the URL=. Thanks :-) Sep 8, 2011 at 13:41
  • 2
    another typo to watch for if this doesn't seem to work for you - that's a semicolon between the delay and the url, not a comma.
    – Mikeb
    Aug 19, 2013 at 21:18
35

There is a security setting in internet explorer that does not allow meta tag refresh. It is under the Security tab, then choose Custom Level and the Meta Tag Refresh under Miscellaneous. If that is disabled, it would stop the meta refresh from working.

Aside from being able to disable it selectively, it is automatically disabled if you set IE's security level to 'High' [observed in IE9].

2
  • Absolutely spot on. This was the exact solution in my case, as I was accessing IE from inside an Azure VM for testing purposes.
    – julealgon
    Aug 1, 2014 at 14:53
  • This IE setting (security level='High') is a problem as Meta Tag Refresh is often cited as a solution to redirerect when javascript is disabled which is the case also when security level is high.
    – frank
    May 22, 2015 at 19:12
5

is it a really old version of IE? if so, try:

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;url=http://example.com/"> </meta>

It needs a white space. HTML editor will complain, but just ignore it.

1
  • 1
    By really old, do you mean IE7? Haha, this finally worked for me. Thanks! Aug 31, 2011 at 19:08
3

Check out this solution. It handles both javascript and meta-refresh at the same time: Meta-refresh and javascript

2

The META tag is not an empty tag and does not have a closing tag in HTML, only in XHTML. (If you are really are sending XHTML, it may not work right on older versions of IE anyway, there are only workarounds to send XHTML to older IE versions.)

Try:

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;url=http://example.com/">

W3 Schools META Tag Description

You might also try:

  1. Checking the major and minor versions of IE. You can do this on the help->about menu option.
  2. IE has historically gotten all confused by filenames and MIMEtypes. Make sure that you are sending your HTML as an htm or html extension file, and that those filetypes are set up on your server to send text/html mimetype.
  3. Make sure your server isn't sending a conflicting meta refresh http header.
1

In case anyone tries to use meta refresh to redirect to new URL in Facebook applications ( either Page Tab app or IFRAME app ), the tag is disabled by Facebook somehow.

Workaround is:

<script>
top.window.location = 'http://example.com';
</script>

Remember to target "top", as Facebook applications are in IFRAME.

0

Just a wild guess: maybe there are some adblockers installed on those machines where the redirect does not work. Can't think of any other reason why this common technique works on some machines while it fails on others for you.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.