1225

I want to use this technique and change the SVG color, but so far I haven't been able to do so. I use this in the CSS, but my image is always black, no matter what.

My code:

.change-my-color {
  fill: green;
}
<svg>
    <image class="change-my-color" xlink:href="https://svgur.com/i/AFM.svg" width="96" height="96" src="ppngfallback.png" />
</svg>

10
  • 1
    I'm no svg expert, but have you tried changing fill to background-color?
    – Meg
    Mar 7, 2014 at 14:29
  • 6
    @Megan in svg background-color is specified with the 'fill' property and the border with 'stroke' (as you would do in Illustrator). w3.org/TR/SVG/propidx.html
    – Barbara
    Mar 7, 2014 at 14:36
  • 16
    CSS from your HTML document will not apply to SVG elements within <img />
    – pawel
    Mar 7, 2014 at 14:38
  • 11
    This is possible now. Simple and functional answer here: stackoverflow.com/a/53336754/467240
    – mtyson
    Jan 12, 2020 at 20:27
  • 3
    Hi, you should probably change the acceepted answer (look at the most voted one). Mar 31, 2021 at 8:01

46 Answers 46

1549

2020 answer

CSS Filter works on all current browsers

To change any SVGs color

  1. Add the SVG image using an <img> tag.

    <img src="dotted-arrow.svg" class="filter-green"/>
    
  2. To filter to a specific color, use the following Codepen (click here to open the codepen) to convert a hexadecimal color code to a CSS filter:

    For example, output for #00EE00 is

    filter: invert(42%) sepia(93%) saturate(1352%) hue-rotate(87deg) brightness(119%) contrast(119%);
    

    Generate a filter for any color here.

  3. Add the CSS filter into this class.

    .filter-green{
        filter: invert(48%) sepia(79%) saturate(2476%) hue-rotate(86deg) brightness(118%) contrast(119%);
    }
    
23
  • 12
    This comes with the usual caveat about not being supported in older browser versions: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/…
    – Kevin Wang
    Mar 20, 2019 at 19:00
  • 170
    As noted in the CodePen, if your SVG isn't black (mine was grey), adding brightness(0) saturate(100%) to the beginning of the list of filters will first turn it 100% black, which enables the other filters to change it to the correct color.
    – jdunning
    Apr 11, 2019 at 16:57
  • 8
    Also, lots of fascinating background on the solution in this StackOverflow question that informed the CodePen.
    – jdunning
    Apr 11, 2019 at 17:05
  • 11
    My guy. The support seems acceptable caniuse.com/#feat=css-filters.
    – Sam Doidge
    Nov 7, 2019 at 15:20
  • 27
    but how do you specify a particular color ?
    – phil123456
    Oct 19, 2020 at 6:37
552

To change the color of any SVG, you can directly change the SVG code by opening the SVG file in any text editor. The code may look like the below code:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!-- Generator: Adobe Illustrator 16.0.0, SVG Export Plug-In . SVG Version: 6.00 Build 0)  -->
<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd">
<svg version="1.1" id="Layer_1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" x="0px" y="0px"
     width="500px" height="500px" viewBox="0 0 500 500" enable-background="new 0 0 500 500" xml:space="preserve">

    <g>
        <path d="M114.26,436.584L99.023,483h301.953l-15.237-46.416H114.26z M161.629,474.404h-49.592l9.594-29.225h69.223
                 C181.113,454.921,171.371,464.663,161.629,474.404z"/>

    /* Some more code goes on */
    </g>
</svg>

You can observe that there are some XML tags like path, circle, polygon, etc.. There you can add your own color with help of the style attribute. Look at the below example

<path fill="#AB7C94" d="M114.26,436.584L99.023,483h301.953l-15.237-46.416H114.26z M161.629,474.404h-49.592l9.594-29.225h69.223
                        C181.113,454.921,171.371,464.663,161.629,474.404z"/>

Add the style attribute to all the tags so that you can get your SVG of your required color.

As per Daniel's comment, we can use fill attribute directly instead of fill element inside style attribute.

7
  • 151
    Why not just using attribute fill like this: fill = "#AB7C94" ? Not sure why the style attribute is needed
    – bg17aw
    Jan 27, 2017 at 19:24
  • 7
    Hi Daniel, yeah it works. I didn't knew that fill can be used as an attribute. Sorry for not noticing your comment so long @bg17aw Apr 30, 2018 at 9:08
  • 5
    This should be the best answer because it provides the same result which much less code. Less code, better code.
    – NDi
    Dec 12, 2020 at 5:32
  • 1
    If you don't want to change the color of the svg programmatically, this is the best and easiest solution. Thank you!
    – Torben
    Jul 30, 2021 at 13:10
  • 1
    Problem I see is, if we need may different colors. Its will increase the size of project & slower the page loading. But SVG's are normally small in size. In my case its not a problem to add few images. But this is a good answer. Thanks! Sep 22, 2021 at 16:44
494

If you want to change the color dynamically:

  1. Open the SVG in a code editor

  2. Add or rewrite the attribute of fill of every path to fill="currentColor"

  3. Now, that svg will take the color of your font color, so you can do something like:

    svg {
        color : "red";
    }
    
10
  • 11
    This is how icons (SVGs) from font-awesome do it. Works great.
    – Peppe L-G
    Jun 14, 2021 at 13:45
  • 27
    Also you may have to change stroke attributes to stroke="currentColor". Sep 29, 2021 at 21:16
  • 150
    It doesn't work if SVG is saved as a file and displayed with <img> tag.
    – Niksr
    Dec 27, 2021 at 12:55
  • 23
    How are you including the SVG, inline or using an img tag? Please include in your answer.
    – racitup
    Jan 12, 2022 at 17:29
  • 19
    Should add that it only works if you are using the svg inline in the html.
    – darrendev
    Apr 23, 2022 at 13:17
350

You can't change the color of an image that way. If you load SVG as an image, you can't change how it is displayed using CSS or JavaScript in the browser.

If you want to change your SVG image, you have to load it using <object>, <iframe> or using <svg> inline.

If you want to use the techniques in the page, you need the Modernizr library, where you can check for SVG support and conditionally display or not a fallback image. You can then inline your SVG and apply the styles you need.

See:

#time-3-icon {
   fill: green;
}

.my-svg-alternate {
  display: none;
}
.no-svg .my-svg-alternate {
  display: block;
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
  background-image: url(image.png);
}
<svg width="96px" height="96px" viewBox="0 0 512 512" enable-background="new 0 0 512 512" xml:space="preserve">
<path id="time-3-icon" d="M256,50C142.229,50,50,142.229,50,256c0,113.77,92.229,206,206,206c113.77,0,206-92.23,206-206
    C462,142.229,369.77,50,256,50z M256,417c-88.977,0-161-72.008-161-161c0-88.979,72.008-161,161-161c88.977,0,161,72.007,161,161
    C417,344.977,344.992,417,256,417z M382.816,265.785c1.711,0.297,2.961,1.781,2.961,3.518v0.093c0,1.72-1.223,3.188-2.914,3.505
    c-37.093,6.938-124.97,21.35-134.613,21.35c-13.808,0-25-11.192-25-25c0-9.832,14.79-104.675,21.618-143.081
    c0.274-1.542,1.615-2.669,3.181-2.669h0.008c1.709,0,3.164,1.243,3.431,2.932l18.933,119.904L382.816,265.785z"/>
</svg>

<image class="my-svg-alternate" width="96" height="96" src="ppngfallback.png" />

You can inline your SVG. Tag your fallback image with a class name (my-svg-alternate):

<svg width="96px" height="96px" viewBox="0 0 512 512" enable-background="new 0 0 512 512" xml:space="preserve">
<path id="time-3-icon" .../>
</svg>

<image class="my-svg-alternate" width="96" height="96" src="ppngfallback.png" />

And in CSS use the no-svg class from Modernizr (CDN: http://ajax.aspnetcdn.com/ajax/modernizr/modernizr-2.7.2.js ) to check for SVG support. If there isn't any SVG support, the SVG block will be ignored and the image will be displayed, otherwise the image will be removed from the DOM tree (display: none):

.my-svg-alternate {
  display: none;
}
.no-svg .my-svg-alternate {
  display: block;
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
  background-image: url(image.png);
}

Then you can change the color of your inlined element:

#time-3-icon {
   fill: green;
}
9
  • 21
    You cannot style embedded object SVGs from the hosting document.
    – Javier Rey
    Nov 11, 2018 at 4:27
  • 3
    @JavierRey you could inject the styling into the object tag's contents via javascript. But you're right that it does not apply if you just add it to the hosting document's stylesheet. Dec 31, 2018 at 11:21
  • 3
    I'm using the solution from @manish-menaria and it works perfectly.
    – Ryan Ellis
    Mar 1, 2019 at 12:51
  • 3
    Accepted answer should be changed to: stackoverflow.com/a/53336754/467240
    – mtyson
    Jan 12, 2020 at 20:27
  • 5
    There is a way to do it, just give the svg fill="currentColor" property, than it will get color from CSS color assigned to it (font color). See this answer stackoverflow.com/a/65147574/8230784
    – justdvl
    Apr 27, 2021 at 2:15
111

Only SVG with path information. You can't do that to the image... as the path you can change stroke and fill information and you are done. like Adobe Illustrator

So, via CSS you can overwrite the path fill value:

path { fill: orange; }

But if you want a more flexible way as you want to change it with a text when having some hovering effect going on, use:

path { fill: currentColor; }

body {
  background: #ddd;
  text-align: center;
  padding-top: 2em;
}

.parent {
  width: 320px;
  height: 50px;
  display: block;
  transition: all 0.3s;
  cursor: pointer;
  padding: 12px;
  box-sizing: border-box;
}

/***  desired colors for children  ***/
.parent{
  color: #000;
  background: #def;
}
.parent:hover{
  color: #fff;
  background: #85c1fc;
}

.parent span{
  font-size: 18px;
  margin-right: 8px;
  font-weight: bold;
  font-family: 'Helvetica';
  line-height: 26px;
  vertical-align: top;
}
.parent svg{
  max-height: 26px;
  width: auto;
  display: inline;
}

/****  magic trick  *****/
.parent svg path{
  fill: currentcolor;
}
<div class='parent'>
  <span>TEXT WITH SVG</span>
  <svg version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" width="128" height="128" viewBox="0 0 32 32">
<path d="M30.148 5.588c-2.934-3.42-7.288-5.588-12.148-5.588-8.837 0-16 7.163-16 16s7.163 16 16 16c4.86 0 9.213-2.167 12.148-5.588l-10.148-10.412 10.148-10.412zM22 3.769c1.232 0 2.231 0.999 2.231 2.231s-0.999 2.231-2.231 2.231-2.231-0.999-2.231-2.231c0-1.232 0.999-2.231 2.231-2.231z"></path>
</svg>
</div>

2
  • 2
    It's a great and awesome solution in a simple way, I've tried the way, and it's working for me. Thank you. Aug 19, 2022 at 21:23
  • yes, I know now, use the fill in path of SVG, not in svg itself. thankyou! Sep 9, 2022 at 2:07
72

Solution 1 - Edit SVG to point to the currentColor

<svg>... fill: currentColor stroke: currentColor ...</svg>

Then you can control the color of the stroke and the fill from your CSS content:

svg {
  color: blue; /* Or any color of your choice. */
}

Pros and cons:

  • Simple and uses conventional supported CSS.

Suitable if:

  • You control the SVG
  • SVG can be included inline in the HTML.

Solution 2 - CSS mask property

<i class="icon"></i>
  .icon {
    -webkit-mask-size: cover;
    mask-size: cover;
    -webkit-mask-image: url(https://url.of.svg/....svg);
    mask-image: url(https://url.of.svg/....svg);
    background-color: blue; /* Or any color of your choice. */
    width: 20px;
    height: 20px;
  }

}

Pros and cons

  • Relatively easy to use
  • Browser support for the mask CSS property is partial.

Suitable if:

  • SVG is external, and included via URL
  • Meant to be used on modern known browsers.

Solution 3 - CSS Filter property - static color

If the color is known in advance, you can use https://codepen.io/sosuke/pen/Pjoqqp to find the filter needed to change your SVG to the desired color. For example, to convert the svg to #00f:

<img src="https://url.of.svg/....svg" class="icon">
.icon {
    filter: invert(8%) sepia(100%) saturate(6481%) hue-rotate(246deg) brightness(102%) contrast(143%);
}

If your original color isn't black, prefix the list of filters with brightness(0) saturate(100%) to convert it first to black.

Pros and cons:

  • There might be a small, nonsignificant difference between the result and the desired color.

Suitable if:

  • Desired color is known in advance.
  • External image
4
  • On Solution 3 pros and cons; it might be worth adding that using multiple filters on complex SVG images have a huge negative impact on performance. And should be used sparingly if at all.
    – umbriel
    Apr 21, 2022 at 13:46
  • The C style /* */ is the only valid comment character sequence in CSS. Otherwise, the consequence is likely silently ignored CSS content. A CSS validator will report an error: "7 Parse Error // Or any color of your choice. width: 20px" Jan 12, 2023 at 19:05
  • Thanks @PeterMortensen !! That's what happens when you edit your code on Stackoverflow instead of the code editor ...
    – Ben Carp
    Jan 14, 2023 at 19:44
  • 2
    How can I like this multiple times! This was it. If the original color isn't black you really need to first convert to black by prefixing with 'brightness(0) saturate(100%)' Was really helpful Aug 17, 2023 at 7:23
58

I added a test page - to color SVG via Filter settings:

For example,

filter: invert(0.5) sepia(1) saturate(5) hue-rotate(175deg)

Upload & Color your SVG - Jsfiddle

I took the idea from: Swapping Fill Color on Image Tag SVGs

2
34

SVG mask on a box element with a background color will result:

body{ overflow:hidden; }

.icon {
  --size: 70px;
  display: inline-block;
  width: var(--size);
  height: var(--size);
  transition: .12s;
  
  -webkit-mask-size: cover;
  mask-size: cover;
}

.icon-bike {
  background: black;
  animation: 4s frames infinite linear;
  
  -webkit-mask-image: url(https://image.flaticon.com/icons/svg/89/89139.svg);
  mask-image: url(https://image.flaticon.com/icons/svg/89/89139.svg);
}

@keyframes frames {
  0% { transform:translatex(100vw) }
  25% { background: red; }
  75% { background: lime; }
  100% { transform:translatex(-100%) }
}
<i class="icon icon-bike" style="--size:150px"></i>


Note - SVG masks are not supported in Internet Explorer browsers

3
  • 4
    Thanks a lot, @vsync this is just the best hack around for what I need.
    – Vixson
    Jun 17, 2020 at 12:45
  • This is great. However with this approach, we use the img alt field, for accessibility. Any idea on how to bring that back? Thanks!
    – Will59
    Sep 26, 2022 at 11:57
  • 1
    @Will59 - use the ARIA rules: <i role="img" aria-label="Description">
    – vsync
    Sep 26, 2022 at 14:03
19

The easiest way would be to create a font out of the SVG using a service like https://icomoon.io/app/#/select or such. Upload your SVG, click "generate font", include font files and CSS content into your side and just use and style it like any other text. I always use it like this because it makes styling much easier.

But as mentioned in the article commented by @CodeMouse92, icon fonts mess up screen readers (and are possibly bad for SEO). So rather stick to the SVGs.

2
  • 7
    It also messes up screen readers. See "Death to Icon Fonts" by Seren Davies Mar 31, 2017 at 20:55
  • Icon fonts are not bad for SEO. Not understanding how SEO works is what is bad for SEO. Learn about Section 508, ADA, and WCAG, and then you'll understand how to use font icons even better based on do's and don'ts. The video you referenced has been viewed 8500 times with 111 likes. You take this as religion?
    – Pegues
    Aug 2, 2022 at 15:35
14

You can try to color it with this css filter hack:

.colorize-pink {
  filter: brightness(0.5) sepia(1) hue-rotate(-70deg) saturate(5);
}

.colorize-navy {
  filter: brightness(0.2) sepia(1) hue-rotate(180deg) saturate(5);
}

.colorize-blue {
  filter: brightness(0.5) sepia(1) hue-rotate(140deg) saturate(6);
}
0
14

To simply change the color of the SVG file:

Go to the SVG file and under styles, mention the color in fill:

<style>.cls-1{fill: #FFFFFF;}</style>
1
14

To change the color of an SVG element, I have found out a way while inspecting the Google search box search icon below:

.search_icon {
  color: red;
  fill: currentColor;
  display: inline-block;
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
}
<span class="search_icon">
    <svg focusable="false" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 24 24"><path d="M15.5 14h-.79l-.28-.27A6.471 6.471 0 0 0 16 9.5 6.5 6.5 0 1 0 9.5 16c1.61 0 3.09-.59 4.23-1.57l.27.28v.79l5 4.99L20.49 19l-4.99-5zm-6 0C7.01 14 5 11.99 5 9.5S7.01 5 9.5 5 14 7.01 14 9.5 11.99 14 9.5 14z"></path></svg>
</span>

I have used a span element with "display:inline-block", height, width and setting a particular style "color: red; fill: currentColor;" to that span tag which is inherited by the child svg element.

3
  • This was the best answer. Wrapping the svg in a span or div and applying fill: currentColor; to it is the key. Mar 18, 2021 at 2:06
  • Can't believe no one else mentioned this. This is THE answer. Apr 26, 2023 at 11:59
  • To be clear, it doesn't need to be wrapped in a span, almost any element works as a wrapper. Apr 26, 2023 at 12:05
13

Target the path within the 'svg' tag:

<svg>
   <path>....
</svg>

You can do it inline, like:

<path fill="#ccc">

Or

svg{
   path{
        fill: #ccc
12

You can change SVG coloring with CSS if you use some tricks. I wrote a small script for that.

  • go through a list of elements which do have an SVG image
  • load the SVG file as XML
  • fetch only the SVG part
  • change color of path
  • replace src with the modified SVG image as an inline image
$('img.svg-changeable').each(function () {
  var $e = $(this);
  var imgURL = $e.prop('src');

  $.get(imgURL, function (data) {
    // Get the SVG tag, ignore the rest
    var $svg = $(data).find('svg');

    // Change the color
    $svg.find('path').attr('fill', '#000');

    $e.prop('src', "data:image/svg+xml;base64," + window.btoa($svg.prop('outerHTML')));
  });

});

The code above might not be working correctly. I've implemented this for elements with an SVG background image which works nearly similar to this.

But anyway, you have to modify this script to fit your case.

2
  • By the way: If you are a RoR developer, you can add a new method for the sass precompiler which can do the job too. This is much better because you will have the base64 encoded, correct colored image in your compiled css file. No JS needed anymore! Maybe I could provide the code I have written, have to talk to the CTO.
    – cydoc
    Jul 17, 2015 at 7:01
  • 4
    +1 for providing a solution, rather than saying it can't be done. This answer is also relevant: stackoverflow.com/questions/11978995/… Nov 27, 2017 at 18:59
11
  1. Method 1

    The easy and effect way:

    Open your .svg file with any text editor

    <svg version="1.1" id="Capa_1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
       xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" x="0px" y="0px"
       viewBox="0 0 477.526 477.526" style="enable-background:new 0 0 477.526 477.526;
       fill: rgb(109, 248, 248);" xml:space="preserve">
    <svg />
    

    Give an style attribute and fill that with color.

  2. Another way

    Fill with color in your shape. Here i have rect shape fill="white".

    <svg width="800" height="600" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
        <g>
            <title>background</title>
            <rect fill="#fff" id="canvas_background" height="602" width="802" y="-1"
             x="-1"/>
    
                <g display="none" overflow="visible" y="0" x="0" height="100%" width="100%"
                   id="canvasGrid">
    
                   <rect fill="url(#gridpattern)" stroke-width="0" y="0" x="0" height="100%"
                   width="100%"/>
                </g>
        </g>
    </svg>
    
11

2022 Web Component <load-file> answer

This (7 line) native Web Component (JSWC) loads external content, and injects it into the DOM.

It is explained and documented in my DEV blog post: <load-file> Web Component.

Full source code:

customElements.define("load-file", class extends HTMLElement {

  // declare default connectedCallback as sync so await can be used
  async connectedCallback(
      // call connectedCallback with parameter to *replace* SVG (of <load-file> persists)
      src = this.getAttribute("src"),
    // attach a shadowRoot if none exists (prevents displaying error when moving Nodes)
    // declare as parameter to save 4 Bytes: 'let '
    shadowRoot = this.shadowRoot || this.attachShadow({mode:"open"})
  ) {
      // load SVG file from src="" async, parse to text, add to shadowRoot.innerHTML
    shadowRoot.innerHTML = await (await fetch(src)).text()

    // append optional <tag [shadowRoot]> Elements from inside <load-svg> after parsed <svg>
    shadowRoot.append(...this.querySelectorAll("[shadowRoot]"))

    // if "replaceWith" attribute
    // then replace <load-svg> with loaded content <load-svg>
    // childNodes instead of children to include #textNodes also
    this.hasAttribute("replaceWith") && this.replaceWith(...shadowRoot.childNodes)
  }
})
<load-file src="//load-file.github.io/heart.svg">
  <!-- elements inside load-file are MOVED to shadowDOM -->
  <style shadowRoot>
    svg {
      height: 180px; /* Stack Overflow subwindow height */
    }
    path:nth-child(2n+2) {
      fill: GREEN; /* shadowDOM style does NOT style global DOM */
    }
  </style>
</load-file>

2
8

Here the fast and furious way :)

body {
    background-color: #DEFF05;
}

svg {
    width: 30%;
    height: auto;
}

svg path {
    color: red;
    fill: currentcolor;
}
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" id="Capa_1" x="0px" y="0px" viewBox="0 0 514.666 514.666"><path d="M514.666,210.489L257.333,99.353L0,210.489l45.933,19.837v123.939h30V243.282l33.052,14.274v107.678l4.807,4.453  c2.011,1.862,50.328,45.625,143.542,45.625c93.213,0,141.53-43.763,143.541-45.626l4.807-4.452V257.557L514.666,210.489z   M257.333,132.031L439,210.489l-181.667,78.458L75.666,210.489L257.333,132.031z M375.681,351.432  c-13.205,9.572-53.167,33.881-118.348,33.881c-65.23,0-105.203-24.345-118.348-33.875v-80.925l118.348,51.112l118.348-51.111  V351.432z"></path></svg>

2
7

If the same SVG must be used multiple times with different colors, define the set of paths within a hidden SVG which serves as the master copy. Then place new instances which refer to the master path with their individual fills.

Note: This approach only works with inline <svg> tags. It will not work with <img> tags loading .svg files.

:root {
  fill: gray;
}

.hidden {
  display: none;
}

svg {
  width: 1em;
  height: 1em;
}
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" class="hidden">
 <path id="s_fave" d="m379 21c-57 0-104 53-123 78-19-25-66-78-123-78-74 0-133 68-133 151 0 45 18 88 49 116 0.5 0.8 1 2 2 2l197 197c2 2 5 3 8 3s5-1 8-3l206-206c2-2 3-3 5-5 0.8-0.8 1-2 2-3 23-28 35-64 35-102 0-83-60-151-133-151z"/>
 <path id="s_star" d="m511 196c-3-10-13-18-23-19l-148-13-58-137c-4-10-14-17-25-17-11 0-21 6-25 17l-58 137-148 13c-11 1-20 8-23 19-3 10-0.3 22 8 29l112 98-33 145c-2 11 2 22 11 28 5 3 10 5 16 5 5 0 10-1 14-4l127-76 127 76c9 6 21 5 30-1 9-6 13-17 11-28l-33-145 112-98c8-7 11-19 8-29z"/>
</svg>

<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_fave"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_star"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_fave" fill="red"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_star" fill="gold"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_fave" fill="purple"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_star" fill="silver"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_fave" fill="pink"></use></svg>
<svg viewBox="0 0 512 512" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><use href="#s_star" fill="blue"></use></svg>

6

For example, in your HTML:

<body>
  <svg viewBox="" width="" height="">
    <path id="struct1" fill="#xxxxxx" d="M203.3,71.6c-.........."></path>
  </svg>
</body>

Use jQuery:

$("#struct1").css("fill", "<desired colour>");
1
  • 3
    This only works if you include the SVG file inline in the HTML. I've edited your answer to make this clear.
    – Flimm
    Oct 31, 2019 at 14:48
6

Check out this code. It works.

<div>
   <!-- YouTube -->
   <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 576 512">
       <path fill="white"
           d="M549.655 124.083c-6.281-23.65-24.787-42.276-48.284-48.597C458.781 64 288 64 288 64S117.22 64 74.629 75.486c-23.497 6.322-42.003 24.947-48.284 48.597-11.412 42.867-11.412 132.305-11.412 132.305s0 89.438 11.412 132.305c6.281 23.65 24.787 41.5 48.284 47.821C117.22 448 288 448 288 448s170.78 0 213.371-11.486c23.497-6.321 42.003-24.171 48.284-47.821 11.412-42.867 11.412-132.305 11.412-132.305s0-89.438-11.412-132.305zm-317.51 213.508V175.185l142.739 81.205-142.739 81.201z" />
   </svg>

   <!-- Instagram -->
   <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 448 512">
       <path fill="white"
           d="M224.1 141c-63.6 0-114.9 51.3-114.9 114.9s51.3 114.9 114.9 114.9S339 319.5 339 255.9 287.7 141 224.1 141zm0 189.6c-41.1 0-74.7-33.5-74.7-74.7s33.5-74.7 74.7-74.7 74.7 33.5 74.7 74.7-33.6 74.7-74.7 74.7zm146.4-194.3c0 14.9-12 26.8-26.8 26.8-14.9 0-26.8-12-26.8-26.8s12-26.8 26.8-26.8 26.8 12 26.8 26.8zm76.1 27.2c-1.7-35.9-9.9-67.7-36.2-93.9-26.2-26.2-58-34.4-93.9-36.2-37-2.1-147.9-2.1-184.9 0-35.8 1.7-67.6 9.9-93.9 36.1s-34.4 58-36.2 93.9c-2.1 37-2.1 147.9 0 184.9 1.7 35.9 9.9 67.7 36.2 93.9s58 34.4 93.9 36.2c37 2.1 147.9 2.1 184.9 0 35.9-1.7 67.7-9.9 93.9-36.2 26.2-26.2 34.4-58 36.2-93.9 2.1-37 2.1-147.8 0-184.8zM398.8 388c-7.8 19.6-22.9 34.7-42.6 42.6-29.5 11.7-99.5 9-132.1 9s-102.7 2.6-132.1-9c-19.6-7.8-34.7-22.9-42.6-42.6-11.7-29.5-9-99.5-9-132.1s-2.6-102.7 9-132.1c7.8-19.6 22.9-34.7 42.6-42.6 29.5-11.7 99.5-9 132.1-9s102.7-2.6 132.1 9c19.6 7.8 34.7 22.9 42.6 42.6 11.7 29.5 9 99.5 9 132.1s2.7 102.7-9 132.1z" />
   </svg>
</div>

CSS

svg {
   fill: white;
}
1
  • Why is the CSS part syntax highlighted like that? Jan 12, 2023 at 20:21
5

I found it a bit clumsy, but it is definitely a working way to dynamically change the color of an SVG included with <img> tag.

In the SVG file, you can add CSS content the following way:

<svg ...>
    <defs>
        <style>
            ...
        <style>
    <defs>

There you can use @media rules, with which the SVG can look outside itself for contextual circumstances. There's an aspect-ratio media feature that applies to the SVG box (e.g., the <img> tag). You can create different contexts for the SVG by stretching the SVG box a little bit.

This way you can also make the favicon the same SVG that appears on the website, but with a different color. (In this case, no other SVG boxes should be square-shaped.)

/* img stretched horizontally (if SVG is square-shaped) */
@media (min-aspect-ratio: 1000/999) {
    path {
        fill: blue;
    }
}

/* img stretched vertically (if SVG is square-shaped) */
@media (max-aspect-ratio: 999/1000) {
    path {
        fill: green;
    }
}

/* img with exact sizes */
@media (aspect-ratio: 86/74) {
    path {
        fill: red;
    }
}

/* favicon with light browser theme */
@media (aspect-ratio: 1/1) and (prefers-color-scheme: light) {
    path {
        fill: black;
    }
}

/* favicon with dark browser theme */
@media (aspect-ratio: 1/1) and (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
    path {
        fill: white;
    }
}

One very important thing

The SVG must contain viewBox information, so that the stretching does not affect the graphics. Example:

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="300" height="300" viewBox="0 0 300 300">
4

Use an svg <mask> element.

This is better than other solutions because:

  • Closely matches your original code.
  • Works in IE!
  • The embedded image can still be an external, unmodified file.
  • The image does not even have to be an SVG.
  • Color is inherited from font-color, so easy to use alongside text.
  • Color is a normal CSS color, not a strange combination of filters.

<svg style="color: green; width: 96px; height: 96px" viewBox="0 0 100 100" preserveAspectRatio="none">
  <defs>
    <mask id="fillMask" x="0" y="0" width="100" height="100">
      <image xlink:href="https://svgur.com/i/AFM.svg" x="0" y="0" width="100" height="100" src="ppngfallback.png" />
    </mask>
  </defs>
  <rect x="0" y="0" width="100" height="100" style="stroke: none; fill: currentColor" mask="url(&quot;#fillMask&quot;)" />
</svg>

https://jsfiddle.net/jamiegl/5jaL0s1t/19/

2
  • 1
    Works great! Note to add: the svg should be white.
    – edwin
    Jul 24, 2021 at 8:12
  • This is the only answer I can get working with :hover and transitions.
    – mm201
    Dec 12, 2023 at 19:53
4

For a better resolution about Manish Menaria's (thank you so much for your help) response, use this filter generator instead a purposed generator: https://angel-rs.github.io/css-color-filter-generator/

.filter-green{
    filter: invert(48%) sepia(79%) saturate(2476%) hue-rotate(86deg) brightness(118%) contrast(119%);
}
3

If you want to do this to an inline SVG file, that is, for example, a background image in your CSS content:

background: url("data:image/svg+xml;charset=utf8,%3Csvg xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' fill='rgba(31,159,215,1)' viewBox='...'/%3E%3C/svg%3E");

Of course, replace the ... with your inline image code.

3

There are some problems with Manish Menaria's answer, if we convert white color it shows gray.

So I added some tweaks, and the below example specifically shows how to change the color in the material icon:

<mat-icon class="draft-white" svgIcon="draft" aria-hidden="false"></mat-icon>
.draft-white{
    filter: brightness(0) invert(1);
}
3

My answer would be this. But I’m not 100% sure if it works for everyone:

Select 'svg' and then 'path'. And you can change 'fill' then.

.eye-icon-container {
    width: 33px;
    height: 33px;
    border-radius: 5px;
    display: flex;
    justify-content: center;
    align-items: center;

    :hover {
      background-color: #ddf0ff;
    }
    :active {
      background-color: #1d398d;
      svg {
        path {
          fill: #fff;
        }
      }
    }
  }
3

If you have a single-colour SVG with varying opacities that you simply want to tint to a different colour then there is another approach that can be used: the feFlood SVG filter.

This solution is not as straightforward as a single-line CSS, however:

  • It works on SVGs inside of an img element.
  • This doesn't require editing the source SVG at all.
  • It allows you to simply choose a target colour for the SVG and not worry about complex colour transforms, like hue-rotate.

Here is an example:

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="0" height="0">
  <defs>
    <filter id="recolourFilter" filterUnits="userSpaceOnUse">
      <feFlood flood-color="aquamarine" result="flood" />
      <feComposite in="flood" in2="SourceAlpha" operator="in" />
    </filter>
  </defs>
</svg>

<img style="filter: url(#recolourFilter);" width="300" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6b/Bitmap_VS_SVG.svg" />

In the above example, we create an inline SVG to define the filters and then we apply it to the image. Inside of the <filter> block we first define the fill colour that we want via <feFlood> and then we create a composite image using the alpha channel of the source plus the flood colour. Finally, the filter is applied to the whole image via the filter CSS property on the img element.

I learned about this technique from this Smashing Magasine article. It's a highly recommended read if you want to learn more about SVG filters.

A few additional things to note:

  • This filter can be applied to any HTML element via the CSS filter property.
  • The same filter can be reused multiple times on the same page.
  • If you are using an inline SVG then the <defs> block can form part of the svg element and the filter can still be applied to the whole SVG or on selective elements. This avoids needing a separate SVG element for the filters.
3

if you are using svg with path then give fill color to path:

    svg path{
fill:red;
}
2

Actually, there is a quite more flexible solution to this problem: writing a Web Component which will patch SVG as text at runtime. I also published in a gist with a link to JSFiddle.

👍 filter: invert(42%) sepia(93%) saturate(1352%) hue-rotate(87deg) brightness(119%) contrast(119%);

<html>

<head>
  <title>SVG with color</title>
</head>

<body>
  <script>
    (function () {
      const createSvg = (color = '#ff9933') => `
          <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" version="1.1" width="76px" height="22px" viewBox="-0.5 -0.5 76 22">
            <defs/>
              <g>
                <ellipse cx="5" cy="10" rx="5" ry="5" fill="#ff9933" stroke="none" pointer-events="all"/>
                <ellipse cx="70" cy="10" rx="5" ry="5" fill="#ff9933" stroke="none" pointer-events="all"/>
                <path d="M 9.47 12.24 L 17.24 16.12 Q 25 20 30 13 L 32.5 9.5 Q 35 6 40 9 L 42.5 10.5 Q 45 12 50 6 L 52.5 3 Q 55 0 60.73 3.23 L 66.46 6.46" fill="none" stroke="#ff9933" stroke-miterlimit="10" pointer-events="stroke"/>
              </g>
          </svg>`.split('#ff9933').join(color);

      function SvgWithColor() {
        const div = Reflect.construct(HTMLElement, [], SvgWithColor);
        const color = div.hasAttribute('color') ? div.getAttribute('color') : 'cyan';
        div.innerHTML = createSvg(color);
        return div;
      }

      SvgWithColor.prototype = Object.create(HTMLElement.prototype);
      customElements.define('svg-with-color', SvgWithColor);

      document.body.innerHTML += `<svg-with-color
        color='magenta'
      ></svg-with-color>`;

    })();

  </script>
</body>

</html>
2

This took a while for me to workout, you can't change the colour of an imported svg (easily), how i managed to do and keep themes / colours from createStyles in my react application is like so:

<MURadio
  icon={
    <svg
      width="24px"
      height="24px"
      viewBox="0 0 24 24"
      version="1.1"
      xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
      style={{
        fillRule: "evenodd",
        clipRule: "evenodd",
        strokeLinejoin: "round",
        strokeMiterlimit: "2",
      }}
    >
      <g transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,-511.714,-525.038)">
        <g transform="matrix(1.04348,0,0,1.04348,511.192,523.902)">
          <circle cx="12" cy="12.589" r="11.5" style={{ fill: "white" }} />
          <path
            d="M12,1.089C18.347,1.089 23.5,6.242 23.5,12.589C23.5,18.936 18.347,24.089 12,24.089C5.653,24.089 0.5,18.936 0.5,12.589C0.5,6.242 5.653,1.089 12,1.089ZM12,2.089C6.205,2.089 1.5,6.794 1.5,12.589C1.5,18.384 6.205,23.089 12,23.089C17.795,23.089 22.5,18.384 22.5,12.589C22.5,6.794 17.795,2.089 12,2.089Z"
            className={classes.icon}
          />
        </g>
      </g>
    </svg>
  }
/>;
const useRadioButtonClasses = makeStyles<ITheme, IRadioButtonErrorProps>(
  (theme) =>
    createStyles({
      radio: { color: theme.mvf.palette.border },
      card: {
        height: '100%',
      },
      icon: ({ isError }) => ({
        fill: theme.mvf.palette.border,
        ...(isError && {
          fill: theme.mvf.palette.error,
        }),
      }),
      selectedRadioIcon: ({ isError }) => ({
        fill: theme.mvf.palette.primary.main,
        ...(isError && {
          fill: theme.mvf.palette.error,
        }),
      }),
...etc

I am assuming some level of knowledge, as this isn't full code, but MURadio is an v4 material ui radio button in use in our app, with the custom svg in one of the props by this material ui component - so you have change the default radio icon... and you can apply a theme colour to the custom radio icon (svg) dynamically, and as i am passing isError state like so const classes = useRadioButtonClasses({ isError }); so we can change the svg colour if there is an error.

Works for me and same setup (class.icon) as we style the regular components, hope it helps you.

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