173

WebKit/Blink's (Safari/Chrome) default behaviour on MacOS since 10.7 (Mac OS X Lion) is to hide scroll bars from trackpad users when they're not in use. This can be confusing; the scroll bar is often the only visual cue that an element is scrollable.

Example (jsfiddle)

HTML
<div class="frame">
    Foo<br />
    Bar<br />
    Baz<br />
    Help I'm trapped in an HTML factory! 
</div>
CSS
.frame {
    overflow-y: auto;
    border: 1px solid black;
    height: 3em;
    width: 10em;
    line-height: 1em;
}​
WebKit (Chrome) Screenshot

screenshot of a div with no visible scroll bar

Presto (Opera) Screenshot

screenshot of a div with a visible scroll bar


How can I force a scroll bar to always be displayed on a scrollable element in WebKit?

3
  • Have you tried overflow:scroll? This used to work in Chrome. It should force the scrollbars to always display.
    – xaddict
    Apr 22, 2015 at 14:28
  • 3
    Note that it's also a problem in Firefox on Mac OS X.
    – Blaise
    Sep 8, 2015 at 9:34
  • Man, I hate it when websites mess with the UI on my system and user agent. May 5, 2017 at 7:49

5 Answers 5

257

The appearance of the scroll bars can be controlled with WebKit's -webkit-scrollbar pseudo-elements [blog]. You can disable the default appearance and behaviour by setting -webkit-appearance [docs] to none.

Because you're removing the default style, you'll also need to specify the style yourself or the scroll bar will never show up. The following CSS recreates the appearance of the hiding scroll bars:

Example (jsfiddle)

CSS
.frame::-webkit-scrollbar {
    -webkit-appearance: none;
}

.frame::-webkit-scrollbar:vertical {
    width: 11px;
}

.frame::-webkit-scrollbar:horizontal {
    height: 11px;
}

.frame::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb {
    border-radius: 8px;
    border: 2px solid white; /* should match background, can't be transparent */
    background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, .5);
}

.frame::-webkit-scrollbar-track { 
    background-color: #fff; 
    border-radius: 8px; 
} 
WebKit (Chrome) Screenshot

screenshot showing webkit's scrollbar, without needing to hover

10
  • 1
    For forced macosx lion scrollbars, the trick described here does not work with this technique: stackoverflow.com/a/3417992/62255. No bother though -- since we are explicitly setting the dimensions here, we can access them directly.
    – jedierikb
    Aug 16, 2012 at 15:55
  • 5
    Note that you can also customize the scrollbar's track/background with: .frame::-webkit-scrollbar-track { background-color: #FFF; border-radius: 8px; }
    – XML
    Oct 2, 2012 at 23:03
  • Note webkit scrollbar styles don't work in iOS 7 (and possibly 6).
    – RobW
    Mar 24, 2014 at 14:34
  • 4
    One thing to mention is that, in my testing and a really old comment by someone else it seems you can't have an always-on scrollbar AND the momentum-like scrolling that people are used to with iOS. Doing the momentum-scrolling CSS caused my custom scrollbars to disappear.
    – jmq
    Nov 20, 2015 at 21:58
  • 2
    Haven't verified this lately, but I found this note in our CSS that referenced this solution: "Note that this will show OS X style scrollbars e.g. in Chrome on Windows."
    – Henrik N
    Sep 28, 2016 at 17:49
21

Here is a shorter bit of code that reenables scroll bars across your entire website. I'm not sure if it's much different than the current most popular answer but here it is:

::-webkit-scrollbar {
    -webkit-appearance: none;
    width: 7px;
}
::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb {
    border-radius: 4px;
    background-color: rgba(0,0,0,.5);
    box-shadow: 0 0 1px rgba(255,255,255,.5);
}

Found at this link: http://simurai.com/blog/2011/07/26/webkit-scrollbar

0
20

For a one-page web application where I add scrollable sections dynamically, I trigger OSX's scrollbars by programmatically scrolling one pixel down and back up:

// Plain JS:
var el = document.getElementById('scrollable-section');
el.scrollTop = 1;
el.scrollTop = 0;

// jQuery:
$('#scrollable-section').scrollTop(1).scrollTop(0);

This triggers the visual cue fading in and out.

3

Browser scrollbars don't work at all on iPhone/iPad. At work we are using custom JavaScript scrollbars like jScrollPane to provide a consistent cross-browser UI: http://jscrollpane.kelvinluck.com/

It works very well for me - you can make some really beautiful custom scrollbars that fit the design of your site.

2

Another good way of dealing with Lion's hidden scroll bars is to display a prompt to scroll down. It doesn't work with small scroll areas such as text fields but well with large scroll areas and keeps the overall style of the site. One site doing this is http://versusio.com, just check this example page and wait 1.5 seconds to see the prompt:

http://versusio.com/en/samsung-galaxy-nexus-32gb-vs-apple-iphone-4s-64gb

The implementation isn't hard but you have to take care, that you don't display the prompt when the user has already scrolled.

You need jQuery + Underscore and

$(window).scroll to check if the user already scrolled by himself,

_.delay() to trigger a delay before you display the prompt -- the prompt shouldn't be to obtrusive

$('#prompt_div').fadeIn('slow') to fade in your prompt and of course

$('#prompt_div').fadeOut('slow') to fade out when the user scrolled after he saw the prompt

In addition, you can bind Google Analytics events to track user's scrolling behavior.

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