1248

I'd like to have my Bootstrap menu automatically drop down on hover, rather than having to click the menu title. I'd also like to lose the little arrows next to the menu titles.

6
  • 9
    There is a solution for that, so mikko's answer is correct but covered now with a plugin for specifically that situation. bootstrap-hover-dropdown
    – HenryW
    Sep 4, 2014 at 11:43
  • 2
    See my newly published proper plugin which prevents the issues of the below CSS and js solutions, and works fine on iOS and on modern desktop browsers with touch events. Even the aria attributes are working fine with that: github.com/istvan-ujjmeszaros/bootstrap-dropdown-hover Jun 27, 2015 at 3:18
  • I made a pure CSS3 dropdown with a bootstrap navbar check it out on CodePen Pure CSS3 Dropdown Oct 24, 2015 at 4:40
  • 23
    Think twice if you really need it? Bootstrap is using for adaptive sites. It means they will be used on devices with touch controls as well. That's why it is designed this way. There is no "hover" on touch screens.
    – Serj.by
    Feb 29, 2016 at 14:34
  • Possible duplicate of Bootstrap Dropdown with Hover
    – slugster
    Jul 23, 2018 at 12:31

43 Answers 43

923

To get the menu to automatically drop on hover then this can achieved using basic CSS. You need to work out the selector to the hidden menu option and then set it to display as block when the appropriate li tag is hovered over. Taking the example from the twitter bootstrap page, the selector would be as follows:

ul.nav li.dropdown:hover > ul.dropdown-menu {
    display: block;    
}

However, if you are using Bootstrap's responsive features, you will not want this functionality on a collapsed navbar (on smaller screens). To avoid this, wrap the code above in a media query:

@media (min-width: 979px) {
  ul.nav li.dropdown:hover > ul.dropdown-menu {
    display: block;
  }
}

To hide the arrow (caret) this is done in different ways depending on whether you are using Twitter Bootstrap version 2 and lower or version 3:

Bootstrap 3

To remove the caret in version 3 you just need to remove the HTML <b class="caret"></b> from the .dropdown-toggle anchor element:

<a class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#">
    Dropdown
    <b class="caret"></b>    <-- remove this line
</a>

Bootstrap 2 & lower

To remove the caret in version 2 you need a little more insight into CSS and I suggest looking at how the :after pseudo element works in more detail. To get you started on your way to understanding, to target and remove the arrows in the twitter bootstrap example, you would use the following CSS selector and code:

a.menu:after, .dropdown-toggle:after {
    content: none;
}

It will work in your favour if you look further into how these work and not just use the answers that I have given you.

Thanks to @CocaAkat for pointing out that we were missing the ">" child combinator to prevent sub menus being shown on the parent hover

23
  • 81
    Also had to add margin: 0;, otherwise the 1px margin above .dropdown-menu causes buggy behavior. Aug 18, 2012 at 18:46
  • 12
    Simple solution, but the parent link is still not clickable. I'm using latest bootstrap with roots theme.
    – Krunal
    Sep 14, 2012 at 12:46
  • 5
    Note: Yes it does - this will work in any browser that twitter bootstrap supports. @GeorgeEdison This is basic CSS - what part would not be supported by IE8? If you are having problems, post a question, not misleading comments. Sep 25, 2012 at 6:42
  • 3
    @MyHeadHurts: After some further research - turns out this was indeed a Bootstrap bug and it was only fixed five days ago. Sep 25, 2012 at 18:09
  • 6
    @Krunal to be able to click the link, you must remove the data-toggle="dropdown" attribute. Aug 28, 2013 at 21:40
615

I created a pure on hover dropdown menu based on the latest (v2.0.2) Bootstrap framework that has support for multiple submenus and thought I'd post it for future users:

body {
  padding-top: 60px;
  padding-bottom: 40px;
}

.sidebar-nav {
  padding: 9px 0;
}

.dropdown-menu .sub-menu {
  left: 100%;
  position: absolute;
  top: 0;
  visibility: hidden;
  margin-top: -1px;
}

.dropdown-menu li:hover .sub-menu {
  visibility: visible;
}

.dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {
  display: block;
}

.nav-tabs .dropdown-menu,
.nav-pills .dropdown-menu,
.navbar .dropdown-menu {
  margin-top: 0;
}

.navbar .sub-menu:before {
  border-bottom: 7px solid transparent;
  border-left: none;
  border-right: 7px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2);
  border-top: 7px solid transparent;
  left: -7px;
  top: 10px;
}

.navbar .sub-menu:after {
  border-top: 6px solid transparent;
  border-left: none;
  border-right: 6px solid #fff;
  border-bottom: 6px solid transparent;
  left: 10px;
  top: 11px;
  left: -6px;
}
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/twitter-bootstrap/2.3.2/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet" />

<div class="navbar navbar-fixed-top">
  <div class="navbar-inner">
    <div class="container-fluid">
      <a data-target=".nav-collapse" data-toggle="collapse" class="btn btn-navbar">
        <span class="icon-bar"></span>
        <span class="icon-bar"></span>
        <span class="icon-bar"></span>
      </a>
      <a href="#" class="brand">Project name</a>
      <div class="nav-collapse">
        <ul class="nav">
          <li class="active"><a href="#">Home</a></li>
          <li><a href="#">Link</a></li>
          <li><a href="#">Link</a></li>
          <li><a href="#">Link</a></li>
          <li class="dropdown">
            <a data-toggle="dropdown" class="dropdown-toggle" href="#">Dropdown <b class="caret"></b></a>
            <ul class="dropdown-menu">
              <li>
                <a href="#">2-level Dropdown <i class="icon-arrow-right"></i></a>
                <ul class="dropdown-menu sub-menu">
                  <li><a href="#">Action</a></li>
                  <li><a href="#">Another action</a></li>
                  <li><a href="#">Something else here</a></li>
                  <li class="divider"></li>
                  <li class="nav-header">Nav header</li>
                  <li><a href="#">Separated link</a></li>
                  <li><a href="#">One more separated link</a></li>
                </ul>
              </li>
              <li><a href="#">Another action</a></li>
              <li><a href="#">Something else here</a></li>
              <li class="divider"></li>
              <li class="nav-header">Nav header</li>
              <li><a href="#">Separated link</a></li>
              <li><a href="#">One more separated link</a></li>
            </ul>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <form action="" class="navbar-search pull-left">
          <input type="text" placeholder="Search" class="search-query span2">
        </form>
        <ul class="nav pull-right">
          <li><a href="#">Link</a></li>
          <li class="divider-vertical"></li>
          <li class="dropdown">
            <a class="#" href="#">Menu</a>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </div>
      <!-- /.nav-collapse -->
    </div>
  </div>
</div>

<hr>

<ul class="nav nav-pills">
  <li class="active"><a href="#">Regular link</a></li>
  <li class="dropdown">
    <a href="#" data-toggle="dropdown" class="dropdown-toggle">Dropdown <b class="caret"></b></a>
    <ul class="dropdown-menu" id="menu1">
      <li>
        <a href="#">2-level Menu <i class="icon-arrow-right"></i></a>
        <ul class="dropdown-menu sub-menu">
          <li><a href="#">Action</a></li>
          <li><a href="#">Another action</a></li>
          <li><a href="#">Something else here</a></li>
          <li class="divider"></li>
          <li class="nav-header">Nav header</li>
          <li><a href="#">Separated link</a></li>
          <li><a href="#">One more separated link</a></li>
        </ul>
      </li>
      <li><a href="#">Another action</a></li>
      <li><a href="#">Something else here</a></li>
      <li class="divider"></li>
      <li><a href="#">Separated link</a></li>
    </ul>
  </li>
  <li class="dropdown">
    <a href="#">Menu</a>
  </li>
  <li class="dropdown">
    <a href="#">Menu</a>
  </li>
</ul>

Demo

8
  • 56
    it's a design decision in bootstrap to do not open the dropdowns on hover event...
    – caarlos0
    Aug 28, 2012 at 17:02
  • 19
    so good! I also removed class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" so that only hovers, not click would trigger the menu. Note that when you're using responsive styles, the menus still get swept into the little button at top right, which is still triggered by a click. Big Thanks!
    – ptim
    Jan 28, 2013 at 6:23
  • 12
    To avoid the auto drop down on smaller devices (such as phones) and aonly allow it as of a min-width of e.g. 768px do @media (min-width: 768px) {.dropdown-menu li:hover .sub-menu {visibility: visible;}} and @media (min-width: 768px) {.dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {display: block;}} Oct 31, 2013 at 8:50
  • 2
    Also to make link with children clickable, you have to remove the "data-toggle='dropdown'" on <a> tag.
    – joan16v
    Nov 24, 2014 at 11:15
  • 1
    Here is the solution for Bootstrap 4.x, with simple 7 lines of CSS code: bootsnipp.com/snippets/Vm7d
    – Happy
    May 27, 2018 at 6:17
236

In addition to the answer from "My Head Hurts" (which was great):

ul.nav li.dropdown:hover ul.dropdown-menu{
    display: block;    
}

There are 2 lingering issues:

  1. Clicking on the dropdown link will open the dropdown-menu. And it will stay open unless the user clicks somewhere else, or hovers back over it, creating an awkward UI.
  2. There is a 1px margin between the dropdown link, and dropdown-menu. This causes the dropdown-menu to become hidden if you move slowly between the dropdown and dropdown-menu.

The solution to (1) is removing the "class" and "data-toggle" elements from the nav link

<a href="#">
     Dropdown
     <b class="caret"></b>
</a>

This also gives you the ability to create a link to your parent page - which wasn't possible with the default implementation. You can just replace the "#" with whatever page you want to send the user.

The solution to (2) is removing the margin-top on the .dropdown-menu selector

.navbar .dropdown-menu {
    margin-top: 0px;
}
8
  • 15
    To fix the deliberate click, I just removed the data-toggle="dropdown" attribute, which seemed to work. Mar 14, 2012 at 5:29
  • 5
    Solution (2) for nav-pill buttons: .nav-pills .dropdown-menu { margin-top: 0px; }
    – Loren
    Aug 23, 2012 at 15:22
  • 1
    To fix the problem I noted above li.dropdown:hover > ul.dropdown-menu Apr 3, 2013 at 18:49
  • 12
    removing "class" and "data-toggle" attributes from nav links make it stop working fine in mobile and tablets :(
    – Mosijava
    May 28, 2014 at 5:38
  • 1
    If you removed the data-toggle="dropdown" attribute, you won't be able to expand the drop down menu using the keyboard. So it will not be 508 compliant. How can you disable the click but keep the keyboard functionality?
    – duyn9uyen
    Jul 14, 2015 at 13:48
136

I've used a bit of jQuery:

// Add hover effect to menus
jQuery('ul.nav li.dropdown').hover(function() {
  jQuery(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeIn();
}, function() {
  jQuery(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeOut();
});
6
  • 14
    Like this. Am using JQuery anyway with the Bootstrap stuff and still allows for the default 'click' functionality in touchscreen devices. Jan 29, 2013 at 14:00
  • Used this. I like that it still allows the click functionality as well, for mobiles, but for desktops the hover is perfect.
    – Stuart
    Jan 13, 2014 at 9:02
  • 1
    I used this but also extended it to be useable for dropdowns that are not in a nav. I add class dropdown-hover to the btn-group div and used this jQuery finder $('ul.nav li.dropdown, .dropdown-hover').hover(function() {. Thanks!
    – Brandon
    Apr 20, 2014 at 22:53
  • Used this one, nice and small. The css version did not allow submenu to stay displayed, and 200ms was too quick so I changed it to $('ul.nav li.dropdown').hover(function() { $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeIn(); }, function() { $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeOut().hover(function() { $(this).stop(true, true); }); }); : When the submenu is hover stop fadeOut
    – Damien
    Nov 13, 2015 at 13:20
  • 1
    @nuander, this was intended for Bootstrap V1/2 ::: So this solution is not relevant anymore ::: Jan 26, 2018 at 5:33
78

Simply customize your CSS style in three lines of code

.dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {
   display: block;
}
0
72

There are a lot of really good solutions here. But I thought that I would go ahead and put mine in here as another alternative. It's just a simple jQuery snippet that does it the way bootstrap would if it supported hover for dropdowns instead of just click. I've only tested this with version 3 so I don't know if it would work with version 2. Save it as a snippet in your editor and have it at the stroke of a key.

<script>
    $(function() {
        $(".dropdown").hover(
            function(){ $(this).addClass('open') },
            function(){ $(this).removeClass('open') }
        );
    });
</script>

Basically, It's just saying when you hover on the dropdown class, it will add the open class to it. Then it just works. When you stop hovering on either the parent li with the dropdown class or the child ul/li's, it removes the open class. Obviously, this is only one of many solutions, and you can add to it to make it work on only specific instances of .dropdown. Or add a transition to either parent or child.

5
  • 2
    Great solution! I also removed data-toggle="dropdown" attribute from link in order to make top link clickable.
    – Sergey
    Jun 18, 2014 at 12:18
  • That's a good tip Sergey. I always make sure the top link goes nowhere so that it works on tablets and phones as well. Aug 25, 2014 at 19:14
  • 2
    @Sergey I wouldn't recommend doing that. You would break the functionality for mobile users. They can't use the hover function to open a menu and need to be able to click it.
    – Paul
    Jan 30, 2015 at 23:54
  • This looks really good. Any idea how to add a bit of animation using CSS transitions?
    – Fred Rocha
    Sep 21, 2017 at 16:15
  • In Bootstrap 4 you can get the same result by finding a child element with the dropdown-menu class and using the show class toggle:function(){ $(this).find(".dropdown-menu").addClass('show') }, function(){ $(this).find(".dropdown-menu").removeClass('show') } Jun 13, 2019 at 18:27
25

If you have an element with a dropdown class like this (for example):

<ul class="list-unstyled list-inline">
    <li class="dropdown">
        <a data-toggle="dropdown" href="#"><i class="fa fa-bars"></i> Dropdown 1</a>
        <ul class="dropdown-menu">
            <li><a href="">Item 1</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item 2</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item 3</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item 4</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item 5</a></li>
        </ul>
    </li>
    <li class="dropdown">
        <a data-toggle="dropdown" href="#"><i class="fa fa-user"></i> Dropdown 2</a>
        <ul class="dropdown-menu">
            <li><a href="">Item A</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item B</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item C</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item D</a></li>
            <li><a href="">Item E</a></li>
        </ul>
    </li>
</ul>

Then you can have the dropdown menu to be automatically drop down on hover over, rather than having to click its title, by using this snippet of jQuery code:

<script>
    $('.dropdown').hover(
        function() {
            $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeIn();
        },
        function() {
            $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeOut();
        }
    );

    $('.dropdown-menu').hover(
        function() {
            $(this).stop(true, true);
        },
        function() {
            $(this).stop(true, true).delay(200).fadeOut();
        }
    );
</script>

Here is a demo

This answer relied on @Michael answer, I have made some changes and added some additions to get the dropdown menu work properly

0
22

[Update] The plugin is on GitHub and I am working on some improvements (like use only with data-attributes (no JS necessary). I've leaving the code in below, but it's not the same as what's on GitHub.

I liked the purely CSS version, but it's nice to have a delay before it closes, as it's usually a better user experience (i.e. not punished for a mouse slip that goes 1 px outside the dropdown, etc), and as mentioned in the comments, there's that 1px of margin you have to deal with or sometimes the nav closes unexpectedly when you're moving to the dropdown from the original button, etc.

I created a quick little plugin that I've used on a couple sites and it's worked nicely. Each nav item is independently handled, so they have their own delay timers, etc.

JS

// outside the scope of the jQuery plugin to
// keep track of all dropdowns
var $allDropdowns = $();

// if instantlyCloseOthers is true, then it will instantly
// shut other nav items when a new one is hovered over
$.fn.dropdownHover = function(options) {

    // the element we really care about
    // is the dropdown-toggle's parent
    $allDropdowns = $allDropdowns.add(this.parent());

    return this.each(function() {
        var $this = $(this).parent(),
            defaults = {
                delay: 500,
                instantlyCloseOthers: true
            },
            data = {
                delay: $(this).data('delay'),
                instantlyCloseOthers: $(this).data('close-others')
            },
            options = $.extend(true, {}, defaults, options, data),
            timeout;

        $this.hover(function() {
            if(options.instantlyCloseOthers === true)
                $allDropdowns.removeClass('open');

            window.clearTimeout(timeout);
            $(this).addClass('open');
        }, function() {
            timeout = window.setTimeout(function() {
                $this.removeClass('open');
            }, options.delay);
        });
    });
};  

The delay parameter is pretty self explanatory, and the instantlyCloseOthers will instantly close all other dropdowns that are open when you hover over a new one.

Not pure CSS, but hopefully will help someone else at this late hour (i.e. this is an old thread).

If you want, you can see the different processes I went through (in a discussion on the #concrete5 IRC) to get it to work via the different steps in this gist: https://gist.github.com/3876924

The plugin pattern approach is much cleaner to support individual timers, etc.

See the blog post for more.

0
21

This worked for me:

.dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {
    display: block;
}
2
  • 2
    With mobile however - it is strange.
    – Radmation
    Oct 5, 2016 at 18:11
  • The margin between menu and dropdown-menu makes this useless.
    – AntikM
    Dec 30, 2018 at 0:36
16

This is built into Bootstrap 3. Just add this to your CSS:

.dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {
    display: block;
}
0
11

Just want to add, that if you have multiple dropdowns (as I do) you should write:

ul.nav li.dropdown:hover > ul.dropdown-menu {
    display: block;    
}

And it'll work properly.

1
  • My .dropdown-menu had margin: 2px 0 0; which meant a slow mouseEnter from above hid the menu prematurely. ul.dropdown-menu{ margin-top: 0; }
    – Alastair
    Apr 26, 2013 at 16:02
10

Even better with jQuery:

jQuery('ul.nav li.dropdown').hover(function() {
  jQuery(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).show();
  jQuery(this).addClass('open');
}, function() {
  jQuery(this).find('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).hide();
  jQuery(this).removeClass('open');
});
2
  • 3
    I changed your code to jQuery('ul.nav li.dropdown').hover(function() { jQuery(this).closest('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).show(); jQuery(this).addClass('open'); }, function() { jQuery(this).closest('.dropdown-menu').stop(true, true).hide(); jQuery(this).removeClass('open'); }); so the submenu won't be displayed on hover.
    – farjam
    Sep 6, 2012 at 2:34
  • This code won't work anymore with the latest releases.
    – Paul
    Jan 30, 2015 at 23:36
9

You can use the default $().dropdown('toggle') method to toggle the dropdown menu on hover:

$(".nav .dropdown").hover(function() {
  $(this).find(".dropdown-toggle").dropdown("toggle");
});
0
9

The best way of doing it is to just trigger Bootstrap's click event with a hover. This way, it should still remain touch device friendly.

$('.dropdown').hover(function(){ 
  $('.dropdown-toggle', this).trigger('click'); 
});
2
  • Unwanted result: mousein, click and mouseout will leave the menu open. This is not what I want...
    – Wietse
    Dec 23, 2014 at 14:16
  • Using this, It run the bootstrap function to open the dropdown, That function does many other things, like aria-expanded="true" Jul 25, 2017 at 9:11
8

In my opinion the best way is like this:

;(function($, window, undefined) {
    // Outside the scope of the jQuery plugin to
    // keep track of all dropdowns
    var $allDropdowns = $();

    // If instantlyCloseOthers is true, then it will instantly
    // shut other nav items when a new one is hovered over
    $.fn.dropdownHover = function(options) {

        // The element we really care about
        // is the dropdown-toggle's parent
        $allDropdowns = $allDropdowns.add(this.parent());

        return this.each(function() {
            var $this = $(this),
                $parent = $this.parent(),
                defaults = {
                    delay: 500,
                    instantlyCloseOthers: true
                },
                data = {
                    delay: $(this).data('delay'),
                    instantlyCloseOthers: $(this).data('close-others')
                },
                settings = $.extend(true, {}, defaults, options, data),
                timeout;

            $parent.hover(function(event) {

                // So a neighbor can't open the dropdown
                if(!$parent.hasClass('open') && !$this.is(event.target)) {
                    return true;
                }

                if(settings.instantlyCloseOthers === true)
                    $allDropdowns.removeClass('open');

                window.clearTimeout(timeout);
                $parent.addClass('open');
            }, function() {
                timeout = window.setTimeout(function() {
                    $parent.removeClass('open');
                }, settings.delay);
            });

            // This helps with button groups!
            $this.hover(function() {
                if(settings.instantlyCloseOthers === true)
                    $allDropdowns.removeClass('open');

                window.clearTimeout(timeout);
                $parent.addClass('open');
            });

            // Handle submenus
            $parent.find('.dropdown-submenu').each(function(){
                var $this = $(this);
                var subTimeout;
                $this.hover(function() {
                    window.clearTimeout(subTimeout);
                    $this.children('.dropdown-menu').show();

                    // Always close submenu siblings instantly
                    $this.siblings().children('.dropdown-menu').hide();
                }, function() {
                    var $submenu = $this.children('.dropdown-menu');
                    subTimeout = window.setTimeout(function() {
                        $submenu.hide();
                    }, settings.delay);
                });
            });
        });
    };

    $(document).ready(function() {
        // apply dropdownHover to all elements with the data-hover="dropdown" attribute
        $('[data-hover="dropdown"]').dropdownHover();
    });
})(jQuery, this);

Sample markup:

<li class="dropdown">
    <a href="#" class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" data-hover="dropdown" data-delay="1000" data-close-others="false">
        Account <b class="caret"></b>
    </a>
    <ul class="dropdown-menu">
        <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">My Account</a></li>
        <li class="divider"></li>
        <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Change Email</a></li>
        <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Change Password</a></li>
        <li class="divider"></li>
        <li><a tabindex="-1" href="#">Logout</a></li>
    </ul>
</li>
1
8

I've managed it as follows:

$('ul.nav li.dropdown').hover(function(){
       $(this).children('ul.dropdown-menu').slideDown(); 
    }, function(){
       $(this).children('ul.dropdown-menu').slideUp(); 
});

I hope this helps someone...

0
7

This also can do that.


$('.dropdown').on('mouseover',function(){
    $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').show();
});
$('.dropdown').on('mouseleave',function(){
    $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').hide();
});

If the dropdown has a gap between the hovered element the drop down will immediately close as seen in this GIF

Dropdown hiding as soon as the element is cleared

To prevent this behaviour you can add a timeout to the events of 100 ms

let dropdownTimer;
$('.dropdown').on('mouseover', () => {
    clearTimeout(dropdownTimer)
    $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').show();
});
$('.dropdown').on('mouseleave', () =>{
    dropdownTimer = setTimeout(() => {
        $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').hide();
    }, 100)
});

Dropdown holding open for a set timeout

6

This is probably a stupid idea, but to just remove the arrow pointing down, you can delete the

<b class="caret"></b>

This does nothing for the up pointing one, though...

0
6

I have published a proper plugin for the Bootstrap 3 dropdown hover functionality, in which you can even define what happens when clicking on the dropdown-toggle element (the click can be disabled):

https://github.com/istvan-ujjmeszaros/bootstrap-dropdown-hover


Why I made it when there are many solutions already?

I had issues with all the previously existing solutions. The simple CSS ones are not using the .open class on the .dropdown, so there will be no feedback on the drop-down toggle element when the drop-down is visible.

The js ones are interfering with clicking on .dropdown-toggle, so the dropdown shows up on hover, then hides it when clicking on an opened drop-down, and moving out the mouse will trigger the drop-down to show up again. Some of the js solutions are breaking iOS compatibility, some plugins are not working on modern desktop browsers which are supporting the touch events.

That's why I made the Bootstrap Dropdown Hover plugin which prevents all these issues by using only the standard Bootstrap javascript API, without any hack. Even the Aria attributes are working fine with this plugin.

3
  • What's your opinion about github.com/vadikom/smartmenus ? I cannot decide, both libraries seem to be really good.
    – Csaba Toth
    May 1, 2016 at 6:04
  • 2
    Smartmenus looks really good, it may be better for menus. My plugin is just a small addition to the bootstrap dropdowns, it does no more than opening a dropdown on hover, while smartmenu supports submenus as well, and does some other fancy things. May 1, 2016 at 19:11
  • 1
    Thanks. I see that smartmenu's code is very extensive and there's also a lot of CSS. So far I went with bootstrap-dropdown-hover, because it seems to do the job and more compact. I'm building a landing site with left side navbar.
    – Csaba Toth
    May 1, 2016 at 20:24
5

Also added margin-top:0 to reset the bootstrap css margin for .dropdown-menu so the menu list dosen't dissapear when the user hovers slowly from drop down menu to the menu list.

ul.nav li.dropdown:hover > ul.dropdown-menu {
    display: block;    
}

.nav .dropdown-menu {
    margin-top: 0;
}
1
  • 2
    this is the correct answer, bootstrap is ready for hover on dropdown, if the mouse doesn't go outside of dropdown menu. Removing margin-top allow to go from link to menu without break and so without auto-close of the menu. And this solution allow to keep the correct behavior for touch devices Sep 9, 2014 at 8:21
5

This works for Bootstrap V4

JS:

<script>
        $(function() {
            $('.dropdown-hover').hover(
                function() { $(this).addClass('show'); $(this).find('[data-toggle="dropdown"]').attr('aria-expanded', true); $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').addClass('show'); },
                function() { $(this).removeClass('show'); $(this).find('[data-toggle="dropdown"]').attr('aria-expanded',false); $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').removeClass('show'); }
            );
        });
    </script>

Vanilla Bootstrap 4 Dropdown HTML except for the addition of the dropdown-hover class:

<div class="dropdown dropdown-hover">
<button class="btn btn-text dropdown-toggle" type="button" id="dropdownMenuButton" data-toggle="dropdown" aria-haspopup="true" aria-expanded="false">
    ABOUT
</button>
<div class="dropdown-menu" aria-labelledby="dropdownMenuButton">
    <a class="dropdown-item" href="#">Action</a>
    <a class="dropdown-item" href="#">Another action</a>
    <a class="dropdown-item" href="#">Something else here</a>
</div>

If you don't want to selectively enable the hover feature by using the .dropdown-hover class then simply change the jquery selector from .dropdown-hover to .dropdown.

4

Use this code to open the submenu on mousehover (desktop only):

$('ul.nav li.dropdown').hover(function () {
    if ($(window).width() > 767) {
        $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').show();
    }
}, function () {
    if ($(window).width() > 767) {
        $(this).find('.dropdown-menu').hide().css('display','');
    }
});

And if you want the first level menu to be clickable, even on mobile add this:

    $('.dropdown-toggle').click(function() {
    if ($(this).next('.dropdown-menu').is(':visible')) {
        window.location = $(this).attr('href');
    }
});

The submenu (dropdown-menu) will be opened with mousehover on desktop, and with click/touch on mobile and tablet. Once the submenu was open, a second click will let you open the link. Thanks to the if ($(window).width() > 767), the submenu will take the full screen width on mobile.

2
  • I'd like to use your code, but I'm having trouble getting it to work correctly. First, how to remove the hover() for mobile and only use that for desktop? When I use your code, and resize the window to mobile, I get both the hover() and click() functionality. But even more strange... is that this behavior will stop When I refresh the browser, ha! Could you show me how to fix this? I need desktop submenus to show on hover() and click()to show submenus on mobile Without having to refresh the browser even when resizing the window to work properly. I hope this is clear
    – Chris22
    Dec 28, 2016 at 15:37
  • Use this best method: @falter May 28, 2019 at 12:52
4
$('.dropdown').hover(function(e){$(this).addClass('open')})
1
  • 1
    Please provide some details to your answer. Feb 14, 2017 at 14:37
4

The very simple solution for version 2, only CSS. Keeps the same friendly functionality for mobile and tablet.

@media (min-width: 980px) {
    .dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {
       display: block;
    }
}
1
  • This doesn't work great for some themes where there is a gap between the menu item and the dropdown. The menu will disappear when the mouse moves into this gap. May 22, 2019 at 10:39
4

Bootstrap versions 4 and 5 solutions. (IE compatible)

These are complete solutions that use the mouseover and mouseleave events and some screen width checking. This is better than a pure CSS solution.

Bootstrap v5 - Pure JS (intended for webpack)

export class BootstrapOpenMenuHover {

/**
 * Constructor.
 */
constructor() {
  this.windowWidth = window.innerWidth;
  this.mobileBreakPoint = 991; // Put your menu break point here, when it switches to a hamburger icon.
  this.dropdownNavItems = document.querySelectorAll(".dropdown-toggle.nav-link");
  this.dropdownMenuItems = document.querySelectorAll(".dropdown-menu");

  this.setEventListeners();
}

/**
 * Set all of our event listeners.
 */
setEventListeners() {
  const _self = this;

  // To be safe set the width once the dom is loaded.
  window.addEventListener('load',  function () {
    _self.windowWidth = window.innerWidth;
  });

  // Keep track of the width in the event of a resize.
  window.addEventListener('resize',  function () {
    _self.windowWidth = window.innerWidth;
  });

  // Bind our hover events.
  if (_self.dropdownNavItems !== null)  {
    for (let i = 0; i < _self.dropdownNavItems.length; i++) {

      // On mouse enter.
      _self.dropdownNavItems[i].addEventListener('mouseenter', function () {
        if (_self.windowWidth >= _self.mobileBreakPoint) {
          this.classList.add('show');
          this.ariaExpanded = true;
          this.dataset.bsToggle = null;

          // Update the .dropdown-menu
          this.nextElementSibling.classList.add('show');
          this.nextElementSibling.dataset.bsPopper = 'none';
        }
      });

      // On mouse leave.
      _self.dropdownNavItems[i].addEventListener('mouseleave', function () {
        if (_self.windowWidth >= _self.mobileBreakPoint) {
          this.classList.remove('show');
          this.ariaExpanded = false;
          this.dataset.bsToggle = 'dropdown';

          // Update the .dropdown-menu
          this.nextElementSibling.classList.remove('show');
          this.nextElementSibling.dataset.bsPopper = null;
        }
      });
    }
  }

  // Bind events to .dropdown-menu items.
  if (_self.dropdownMenuItems !== null) {
    for (let i = 0; i < _self.dropdownMenuItems.length; i++) {
      // On mouse enter.
      _self.dropdownMenuItems[i].addEventListener('mouseenter', function () {
        if (_self.windowWidth >= _self.mobileBreakPoint) {
          this.classList.add('show');
          this.dataset.bsPopper = 'none';

          // Update the .dropdown-toggle
          this.previousElementSibling.classList.add('show');
          this.previousElementSibling.ariaExpanded = true;
          this.previousElementSibling.dataset.bsToggle = null;
        }
      });

      // On mouse leave.
      _self.dropdownMenuItems[i].addEventListener('mouseleave', function () {
        if (_self.windowWidth >= _self.mobileBreakPoint) {
          this.classList.remove('show');
          this.dataset.bsPopper = null;

          // Update the .dropdown-toggle
          this.previousElementSibling.classList.remove('show');
          this.previousElementSibling.ariaExpanded = false;
          this.previousElementSibling.dataset.bsToggle = 'dropdown';
        }
      });
    }
   }
  }
 }

 const bootstrapOpenMenuHover = new BootstrapOpenMenuHover();

Bootstrap v4 Solution

This will allow you to follow top level navigation links.

This was built with desktop and mobile in mind. Fell free to change the BREAK_POINT variable to suit your needs :D.

jQuery

var WINDOW_WIDTH;
var BREAK_POINT = 991;

(function ($) {

    /** Set window width onload */
    WINDOW_WIDTH = $(window).width(); // Returns width of browser viewport
    /** Set window width if the browser is resized */
    $(window).resize(function () {
        WINDOW_WIDTH = $(window).width(); // Returns width of browser viewport
    });

    /** Dropdown menu on mouseenter */
    $(".nav-item.dropdown").on('mouseenter', function () {
        console.log("mouseenter");
        if (WINDOW_WIDTH >= BREAK_POINT) {
            // Open up the dropdown
            $(this).addClass('show'); // add the class show to the li parent
            $(this).children('.nav-link').removeAttr('data-toggle'); // remove the data-toggle attribute so we can click and follow link
            $(this).children('.dropdown-menu').addClass('show'); // add the class show to the dropdown div sibling
        }
    });
    /** Dropdown menu on mouseleave */
    $(".nav-item.dropdown").on('mouseleave', function () {
        console.log("mouseleave");
        if (WINDOW_WIDTH >= BREAK_POINT) {
            // Close the dropdown
            $(this).removeClass('show'); // add the class show to the li parent
            $(this).children('.nav-link').attr('data-toggle', 'dropdown'); // remove the data-toggle attribute so we can click and follow link
            $(this).children('.dropdown-menu').removeClass('show'); // add the class show to the dropdown div sibling
        }
    });
});

CSS

@media(min-width:  768px) {
  .dropdown-menu {
    margin-top: 0; // fixes closing on slow mouse transition
  }
}
2
  • Kash's solution works with bootstrap 4. This JS is unnecessary
    – rubenwardy
    Sep 25, 2018 at 0:55
  • @rubenwardy Sorry but I found that if you want to be able to still follow top level navigation links this is the way to go. Using a pure css solution won't allow you to follow top lvl navigation clicks on desktop. Hope that makes sense.
    – Radmation
    Sep 25, 2018 at 14:42
3

This will hide the up ones

.navbar .dropdown-menu:before {
   display:none;
}
.navbar .dropdown-menu:after {
   display:none;
}
0
3

This should hide the drop downs and their carets if they are smaller than a tablet.

@media (max-width: 768px) {
    .navbar ul.dropdown-menu, .navbar li.dropdown b.caret {
        display: none;
    }
}
1
  • Why would you want to hide it? Now the mobile users have no way to access the links that are in the submenu. It's better to turn the hover effect off on a mobile device and keep the dropdown menu intact. That way they can open it by clicking on it.
    – Paul
    Jan 30, 2015 at 23:59
3

The jQuery solution is good, but it will need to either deal with on click events (for mobile or tablet) as hover won't work properly... Could maybe do some window re-size detection?

Andres Ilich's answer seems to work well, but it should be wrapped in a media query:

@media (min-width: 980px) {

    .dropdown-menu .sub-menu {
        left: 100%;
        position: absolute;
        top: 0;
        visibility: hidden;
        margin-top: -1px;
    }

    .dropdown-menu li:hover .sub-menu {
        visibility: visible;
    }

    .dropdown:hover .dropdown-menu {
        display: block;
    }

    .nav-tabs .dropdown-menu, .nav-pills .dropdown-menu, .navbar .dropdown-menu {
        margin-top: 0;
    }

    .navbar .sub-menu:before {
        border-bottom: 7px solid transparent;
        border-left: none;
        border-right: 7px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2);
        border-top: 7px solid transparent;
        left: -7px;
        top: 10px;
    }
    .navbar .sub-menu:after {
        border-top: 6px solid transparent;
        border-left: none;
        border-right: 6px solid #fff;
        border-bottom: 6px solid transparent;
        left: 10px;
        top: 11px;
        left: -6px;
    }
}
3

So you have this code:

<a class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown">Show menu</a>

<ul class="dropdown-menu" role="menu">
    <li>Link 1</li>
    <li>Link 2</li> 
    <li>Link 3</li>                                             
</ul>

Normally it works on a click event, and you want it work on a hover event. This is very simple, just use this JavaScript/jQuery code:

$(document).ready(function () {
    $('.dropdown-toggle').mouseover(function() {
        $('.dropdown-menu').show();
    })

    $('.dropdown-toggle').mouseout(function() {
        t = setTimeout(function() {
            $('.dropdown-menu').hide();
        }, 100);

        $('.dropdown-menu').on('mouseenter', function() {
            $('.dropdown-menu').show();
            clearTimeout(t);
        }).on('mouseleave', function() {
            $('.dropdown-menu').hide();
        })
    })
})

This works very well and here is the explanation: we have a button, and a menu. When we hover the button we display the menu, and when we mouseout of the button we hide the menu after 100 ms. If you wonder why I use that, is because you need time to drag the cursor from the button over the menu. When you are on the menu, the time is reset and you can stay there as many time as you want. When you exit the menu, we will hide the menu instantly without any timeout.

I've used this code in many projects, if you encounter any problem using it, feel free to ask me questions.

0
3

For the caret... I haven't seen any one specifying simple CSS that totally blocks the caret.

Here you go:

.caret {
    display: none !important;
}

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