397

Is it possible to set the size of the background image with CSS?

I want to do something like:

background: url('bg.gif') top repeat-y;
background-size: 490px;

But it seems it's totally wrong to do it like that...

1

18 Answers 18

629

CSS2

If you need to make the image bigger, you must edit the image itself in an image editor.

If you use the img tag, you can change the size, but that would not give you the desired result if you need the image to be background for some other content (and it will not repeat itself like you seems to want)...

CSS3 unleash the powers

This is possible to do in CSS3 with background-size.

All modern browsers support this, so unless you need to support old browsers, this is the way to do it.
Supported browsers:
Mozilla Firefox 4.0+ (Gecko 2.0+), Microsoft Internet Explorer 9.0+, Opera 10.0+, Safari 4.1+ (webkit 532) and Chrome 3.0+.

.stretch{
/* Will stretch to specified width/height */
  background-size: 200px 150px;
}
.stretch-content{
/* Will stretch to width/height of element */
  background-size: 100% 100%;
}

.resize-width{
/* width: 150px, height: auto to retain aspect ratio */
  background-size: 150px Auto;
}
.resize-height{
/* height: 150px, width: auto to retain aspect ratio */
  background-size: Auto 150px;
}
.resize-fill-and-clip{ 
  /* Resize to fill and retain aspect ratio.
     Will cause clipping if aspect ratio of box is different from image. */ 
  background-size: cover;
}
.resize-best-fit{
/* Resize to best fit and retain aspect ratio.
   Will cause gap if aspect ratio of box is different from image. */ 
  background-size: contain;
}

In particular, I like the cover and contain values that gives us new power of control that we didn't have before.

Round

You can also use background-size: round that have a meaning in combination with repeat:

.resize-best-fit-in-repeat{
/* Resize to best fit in a whole number of times in x-direction */ 
  background-size: round auto; /* Height: auto is to keep aspect ratio */
  background-repeat: repeat;
}

This will adjust the image width so it fits a whole number of times in the background positioning area.


Additional note
If the size you need is static pixel size, it is still smart to physically resize the actual image. This is both to improve quality of the resize (given that your image software does a better job than the browsers), and to save bandwidth if the original image is larger than what to display.

2
  • 7
    Note that there is also the question of retina displays on iPad and iPhone and probably other high-resolution devices to come. This means it may be worth resizing larger images using CSS, and using multiple CSS files and other tricks to serve specific images. Nice intro to it here: webmonkey.com/2012/03/…
    – Leo
    Apr 8, 2012 at 13:22
  • This is the worst solution for now, as not every e-commerce shop is going to re-size the image as suggested. In 2009, it most likely was close to the best option, now just use the size attributes like below. Jul 14, 2012 at 0:43
330

Only CSS 3 supports that,

background-size: 200px 50px;

But I would edit the image itself, so that the user needs to load less, and it might look better than a shrunken image without antialiasing.

4
  • 32
    Unfortunately, people still use ie8 Apr 19, 2012 at 0:09
  • 2013 ending, still need to add background: url('resized_image.png')\9; for IE lt 9
    – skobaljic
    Oct 24, 2013 at 7:52
  • This is the way to go even in 2017! Jul 5, 2017 at 21:04
  • I also came from 2017 and this is how we do it.
    – Ska
    Jul 25, 2017 at 11:48
23

If your users use only Opera 9.5+, Safari 3+, Internet Explorer 9+ and Firefox 3.6+ then the answer is yes. Otherwise, no.

The background-size property is part of CSS 3, but it won't work on most browsers.

For your purposes just make the actual image larger.

3
  • 1
    background-size: 100%; background-position:center; - this works in IE6 running on my Virtual Machine on XP Home.
    – InnateDev
    Jul 19, 2011 at 16:53
  • 7
    IE 6,7,8 is not 'most browsers'. Dec 18, 2012 at 10:52
  • 1
    Even in 2013 - while the comment "IE6,7,8 is not 'most browsers'" might be partly true in regards to IE6; IE7 and IE8 still have quite a commanding market share unfortunately. The best way I've found to do this is to use Javascript in combination with modernizr (or other means of tagging 'OLDIE').
    – AndrewPK
    Jan 22, 2013 at 15:01
19

Not possible. The background will always be as large as it can be, but you can stop it from repeating itself with background-repeat.

background-repeat: no-repeat;

Secondly, the background does not go into margin-area of a box, so if you want to have the background only be on the actual contents of a box, you can use margin instead of padding.

Thirdly, you can control where the background image starts. By default it's the top left corner of a box, but you can control that with background-position, like this:

background-position: center top;

or perhaps

background-position: 20px -14px;

Negative positioning is used a lot with CSS sprites.

4
  • No, it not as large as i can be. It's always the same size, but I need to do it bigger.
    – Johan
    Aug 27, 2009 at 14:11
  • Well, that's not possible. There might be options for doing that in future versions of CSS, but that's a long way off.
    – mikl
    Aug 27, 2009 at 14:15
  • This answer is wrong. CSS3 has the background-size property which is supported in IE9+. Apr 1, 2014 at 19:39
  • 3
    Take a look at the time stamp. In 2009, background-size was but a twinkle in WebKit's eyes. Feel free to update it, if you want, but there's already plenty other answers describing background-size.
    – mikl
    Apr 2, 2014 at 20:40
12

Not too hard, if you're not afraid of going a little more in depth :)

There's one forgotten argument:

background-size: contain;

This won't stretch your background-image as it would do with cover. It would stretch until the longer side reaches the width or height of the outer container and therefore preserving the image.

Edit: There's also -webkit-background-size and -moz-background-size.

The background-size property is supported in IE9+, Firefox 4+, Opera, Chrome, and Safari 5+.

- Source: W3 Schools

0
3

background-size: 200px 50px change it to 100% 100% and it will scale on the needs of the content tag like ul li or div... tried it

3

In support of the answer that @tetra gave, I want to point out that if the image is an SVG, then resizing the actual image is not necessary.

Since an SVG file is just XML you can specify whatever size you want it to appear within the XML.

However, if you are using the same SVG image in different places and need it to be different sizes, then using background-size is very helpful. SVG files are inherently smaller than raster images anyway and resizing on the fly with CSS can be very helpful without any performance cost that I am aware of, and certainly little to no loss of quality.

Here is a quick example:

<div class="hasBackgroundImage">content</div>

.hasBackgroundImage
{
    background: transparent url('/image/background.svg') no-repeat 10px 5px;
    background-size: 1.4em;
}

(Note: this works for me in OS X 10.7 with Firefox 8, Safari 5.1, and Chrome 16.0.912.63)

3

You totally can with CSS3:

body {
    background-image: url(images/bg-body.png); 
    background-size: 100%; /* size the background image at 100% like any responsive img tag */
    background-position: top center;
    background-repeat:no-repeat;
 }

This will size a background image to 100% of the width of the body element and will then re-size the background accordingly as the body element re-sizes for smaller resolutions.

Here is the example: http://www.sccc.premiumdw.com/examples/resize-background-images-with-css/

0
2

Just have nested divs to be cross browser compatible

   
      <div>
         <div style="background: url('bg.gif') top repeat-y;min-width:490px;">
            Put content here
         </div>
      </div>
   
2

You can use two <div> elements:

  • One is a container (it is the one which you originally wanted the background image to appear at).

  • The second one is contained within. You set its size to the size of the background image (or the size you wish to be appearing).

The contained div is then set to be positioned absolute. This way it does not interfere with the normal flow of items in the containing div.

It enables you to use sprite images efficiently.

2
put the below code in the body of you css file

background-image: URL('../images/wave-green-plain-colour.jpg') ;
-webkit-background-size: cover;
-moz-background-size: cover;
-o-background-size: cover;
background-size: cover;
width:100px;
1

You can't set the size of your background image with the current version of CSS (2.1).

You can only set: position, fix, image-url, repeat-mode, and color.

1

You have written

background: url('bg.gif') top repeat-y;    
background-size: 490px;

but you will only see the background depending on the size of the container.

if you have an empty container with the background url and whatever the background-size is, you will not see the bg.gif.

If you set the size of the continer to

background: url('bg.gif') top repeat-y;    
background-size: 490px;
height: 490px;
width: 490px;

combined to the code you wrote above, you will be able to see the bg.gif file.

0

background-size is working in Chrome 4.1, but so far I couldn't make it work in Firefox 3.6.

0

I use background images for buttons, but it only shows the image the same size as the text, even if I set width and height. Instead, I pad out my text with &nbsp; characters (non-breaking spaces). I slap in as many as needed, basically, until all the button background appears. So I might have code like this:

In the style sheet:

#v2menu-home {
    background-image:url(../v2-siteimages/button.png);
    background-repeat:no-repeat;
}

In the HTML document:

<div id="v2menu">
    <a id="v2menu-home" href="/index.php">home&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
</div><!-- v2menu -->
1
  • 2
    Another way is to set the size of the link to the size of the background image. In the style sheet, (under #v2menu-home in the example above) use display:block and set the height and the width there. That actually works. No need for non-breaking space characters then. Dec 9, 2010 at 12:34
0

For example:
Background image will always fit to container size (width 100% and height 100px).
Cross-browser CSS:

.app-header {
background: url("themes/default/images/background.jpg") no-repeat;
-moz-background-size: 100% 100px;
-webkit-background-size: 100% 100px;
-o-background-size: 100% 100px;
filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.AlphaImageLoader(src = "themes/default/images/background.jpg", sizingMethod = 'scale');
background-size: 100% 100px;

}

0

This is possible to do in CSS3 with background-size

.backgroungImage {
    background: url('../imageS/background.jpg') no-repeat;
    background-size: 32px 32px;
}
0

If you want to set background-size in the same background property you can use use:

background:url(my-bg.png) no-repeat top center / 50px 50px;
2
  • I can't test, but probably. Sep 2, 2018 at 21:40
  • I thought ipads didnt recognize shorthand background @orlando-leite
    – DGRFDSGN
    Sep 4, 2018 at 11:11

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