601

I want to create a link on a webpage that would close the currently active tab in a browser without closing other tabs in the browser.
When the user clicks the close link, an alert message should appear asking the user to confirm with two buttons, "YES" and "NO". If the user clicks "YES", close that page and If "NO", do nothing.

How can it be done? Any suggestions?

5
  • 2
    I might be late here but this is prevented by the browsers for a reason.<br><br> Think of yourself trying to close a window again and again and it's not closing as its doing the "if no" part from your question which is 'do nothing'. <br><br> This will be irritating for sure ! Mar 16, 2019 at 8:54
  • It is not possible. Read this. stackoverflow.com/a/19768082/4671932 Aug 26, 2020 at 22:52
  • For anyone trying to close the tab programatically, I have two things to add (TL:DR;) 1 You can only close tabs that were opened with javascript (as Ryan Joy mentioned). 2, not mentioned here: You can close the tab only if window.top.opener (the "parent" window) isn't null.
    – Nico
    Nov 25, 2020 at 9:10
  • windows.close() not working in the angular. It gives me Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by them. Warning.
    – Margi212
    Jul 13, 2021 at 5:15
  • The page you want to close paste the following code: <a href="JavaScript.windows.close()"> Close </a> Nov 6, 2022 at 9:57

23 Answers 23

671

You will need Javascript to do this. Use window.close():

close();

Note: the current tab is implied. This is equivalent:

window.close();

or you can specify a different window.

So:

function close_window() {
  if (confirm("Close Window?")) {
    close();
  }
}

with HTML:

<a href="javascript:close_window();">close</a>

or:

<a href="#" onclick="close_window();return false;">close</a>

You return false here to prevent the default behavior for the event. Otherwise the browser will attempt to go to that URL (which it obviously isn't).

Now the options on the window.confirm() dialog box will be OK and Cancel (not Yes and No). If you really want Yes and No you'll need to create some kind of modal Javascript dialog box.

Note: there is browser-specific differences with the above. If you opened the window with Javascript (via window.open()) then you are allowed to close the window with javascript. Firefox disallows you from closing other windows. I believe IE will ask the user for confirmation. Other browsers may vary.

18
  • 530
    You can't close any tab via JavaScript. "This method is only allowed to be called for windows that were opened by a script using the window.open method." In other words, you can only use JavaScript to close a window/tab that was spawned via JavaScript.
    – Ryan Joy
    Jan 16, 2010 at 5:46
  • 9
    -1 Doesn't work chrome 30 PC the other answers showing to open a window in the current tab and then close it work Aug 11, 2013 at 20:17
  • 3
    In about:config dom.allow_scripts_to_close_windows = true might be the solution in Firefox (might be a big security risk!) Mar 19, 2014 at 12:11
  • 9
    The browser does not allow this behavior. Javascript can only close a tab that it opened. Jul 30, 2014 at 0:42
  • 2
    This works (at least) in Chrome 62: <button type="button" onclick="window.open('', '_self', ''); window.close();">Discard</button> See also this article
    – hering
    Nov 23, 2017 at 14:30
269

Try this

<a href="javascript:window.open('','_self').close();">close</a>
12
  • 3
    Working in Firefox 31.0 Aug 22, 2014 at 18:55
  • 2
    Bad side of this solution is that a get request is sent to server. But on the other side, I haven't found any other solution.
    – 100r
    Mar 12, 2015 at 14:38
  • 44
    Doing this from the Chrome console outputs "Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by it"
    – parliament
    Oct 18, 2015 at 16:26
  • 2
    Not working in chrome 60.0.3079.0: "Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by it." Apr 24, 2017 at 17:39
  • 3
    <a href="javascript:window.open(location, '_self').close();">close</a> May 10, 2020 at 13:06
66

This method works in Chrome and IE:

<a href="blablabla" onclick="setTimeout(function(){var ww = window.open(window.location, '_self'); ww.close(); }, 1000);">
    If you click on this the window will be closed after 1000ms
</a>
2
  • 67
    Simpler: open(location, '_self').close();
    – uınbɐɥs
    Jun 5, 2013 at 7:07
  • 4
    This worked well in IE 11, but didn't work in Chrome 38
    – Yann Duran
    Oct 29, 2014 at 23:09
45

As far as I can tell, it no longer is possible in Chrome or FireFox. It may still be possible in IE (at least pre-Edge).

3
  • 3
    This works (at least) in Chrome 62: <button type="button" onclick="window.open('', '_self', ''); window.close();">Discard</button> See also this article
    – hering
    Nov 23, 2017 at 14:30
  • 1
    @hering Well, the article is from 2006, but if you found something that works, that's great news and perhaps will help people who read down this far. Thanks for sharing. Nov 27, 2017 at 14:22
  • The question was about closing the current active tab from within that tab. As you say, it's not possible in Chrome or Firefox. This should be the accepted answer.
    – decates
    Sep 20, 2018 at 9:30
36

Sorry for necroposting this, but I recently implemented a locally hosted site that had needed the ability to close the current browser tab and found some interesting workarounds that are not well documented anywhere I could find.

Note: These workarounds were done with a locally hosted site in mind, and (with the exception of Edge) require the browser to be specifically configured, with non-configured browsers (typical for publicly hosted sites) having limited functionality.



Context:

In the past, the jQuery script window.close() was able to close the current tab without a problem on most browsers. However, most modern browsers no longer support this script, potentially for security reasons.

Current Functionality:

window.close() will work on tabs opened by a script, or by an anchor with target="_blank" (opened in a new tab) without requiring any additional setup or configuration.

See @killstreet's comment on @calios's answer


Browser Specific work-arounds:

Google Chrome:

Chrome does not allow the window.close() script to be to be run and nothing happens if you try to use it. By using the Chrome plugin TamperMonkey however we can use the window.close() method if you include the // @grant window.close in the UserScript header of TamperMonkey.

For example, my script (which is triggered when a button with id = 'close_page' is clicked and if 'yes' is pressed on the browser popup) looks like:

// ==UserScript==
// @name         Close Tab Script
// @namespace    http://tampermonkey.net/
// @version      1.0
// @description  Closes current tab when triggered
// @author       Mackey Johnstone
// @match        http://localhost/index.php
// @grant        window.close
// @require      http://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.4.1.min.js
// ==/UserScript==

(function() {
    'use strict';
    $("#close_page").click(function() {
        var confirm_result = confirm("Are you sure you want to quit?");
        if (confirm_result == true) {
            window.close();
        }
    });
})();

Note: This solution can only close the tab if it is NOT the last tab open however. Specifically, it cannot close the tab if it would cause the window to close.


Firefox:

Firefox has an advanced setting that you can enable to allow scripts to close windows, effectively enabling the window.close() method. To enable this setting go to about:config then search and find the dom.allow_scripts_to_close_windows preference and switch it from false to true.

This allows you to use the window.close() method directly in your jQuery file as you would any other script.

For example, this script works perfectly with the preference set to true:

<script>
  $("#close_page").click(function() {
    var confirm_result = confirm("Are you sure you want to quit?");
    if (confirm_result == true) {
      window.close();
    }
  });
</script>

This works much better than the Chrome workaround as it allows the user to close the current tab even if it is the only tab open, and doesn't require a third party plugin. The one downside however is that it also enables this script to be run by different websites (not just the one you are intending it to use on) so could potentially be a security hazard, although I cant imagine closing the current tab being particularly dangerous.


Edge:

Disappointingly Edge actually performed the best out of all 3 browsers I tried, and worked with the window.close() method without requiring any configuration. When the window.close() script is run, an additional popup alerts you that the page is trying to close the current tab and asks if you want to continue.

Edit: This was on the old version of Edge not based on chromium. I have not tested it, but imagine it will act similarly to Chrome on chromium based versions

MS Edge close tab confirm box


Final Note: The solutions for both Chrome and Firefox are workarounds for something that the browsers intentionally disabled, potentially for security reasons. They also both require the user to configure their browsers up to be compatible before hand, so would likely not be viable for sites intended for public use, but are ideal for locally hosted solutions like mine.

18

It is possible. I searched the whole net for this, but once when i took one of microsoft's survey, I finally got the answer.

try this:

window.top.close();

this will close the current tab for you.

1
  • 31
    "Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by it." on Chrome 50.
    – Husky
    May 2, 2016 at 8:53
13

The following works for me in Chrome 41:

function leave() {
  var myWindow = window.open("", "_self");
  myWindow.document.write("");
  setTimeout (function() {myWindow.close();},1000);
}

I've tried several ideas for FF including opening an actual web-page, but nothing seems to work. As far as I understand, any browser will close a tab or window with xxx.close() if it was really opened by JS, but FF, at least, cannot be duped into closing a tab by opening new content inside that tab.

That makes sense when you think about it - a user may well not want JS closing a tab or window that has useful history.

2
  • Chrome: 'Uncaught TypeError: Cannot set property 'innerHTML' of null' Jul 2, 2016 at 7:31
  • Positive review given. Even if document.write is frown upon due to some details, still a good answer in my humble opinion. The proposed alternatives (document.createElement, .createTextNode, .innerHTML) are not as nice and this provides the opportunity to let the User know. I will set an answer without document.write Best regards Sep 3, 2023 at 3:13
12

window.close() doesn't work in 2k21 because Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by them.

BUT if the tab is opened in the browser not manually, but automatically - then window.close() works.

Automatically (when close() works):

  • <a href="/close" target="_blank"> the browser will open address in the new tab and this tab can be closed with close()
  • when new browser tab is opened from another application (when you click a link in Telegram/Whatsup/Outlook etc) - OS will open new tab and it can be closed with close()
  • when you open the with window.open('ya.ru') - for sure it can be closed with close()

Manually (when it doesn't work):

  • when you open fresh browser and type in the address.
  • when you click (+) to open new tab and type in the address
10

As for the people who are still visiting this page, you are only allowed to close a tab that is opened by a script OR by using the anchor tag of HTML with target _blank. Both those can be closed using the

<script>
    window.close();
</script>
2
  • 1
    This works in every modern browser. IE11 and Edge 17 show a confirm alert but it still works. Oct 24, 2019 at 15:21
  • I am having a hard time getting Angular app to actually log out from Adfs. Wonder if closing the tab is the way to finally getting logged out. I will try this snippet then. Sep 22, 2021 at 22:15
9

Try this as well. Working for me on all three major browsers.

<!-- saved from url=(0014)about:internet -->
<a href="#" onclick="javascript:window.close();opener.window.focus();" >Close Window</a>
2
  • A lot of other techniques here did not work for me, this did, I am using Google Chrome Version 88.0.4324.182 (Official Build) (64-bit)
    – Leroy
    Feb 26, 2021 at 11:39
  • not working in chrome 96 Dec 11, 2021 at 14:07
8

Tested successfully in FF 18 and Chrome 24:

Insert in head:

<script>
    function closeWindow() {
        window.open('','_parent','');
        window.close();
    }
</script> 

HTML:

<a href="javascript:closeWindow();">Close Window</a>

Credits go to Marcos J. Drake.

1
  • 4
    Not owrking on chrome "Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by it." Mar 20, 2019 at 15:35
7
<button class="closeButton" style="cursor: pointer" onclick="window.close();">Close Window</button>

this did the work for me

2
  • Does not work in our React project, may be because we are using jsx rather than plain html and javascript. We get the same error as others: Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by them.
    – nickcin
    Mar 3, 2021 at 14:57
  • What I find is in Chrome it works on local files (at least) when the tab was not first opened by pasting the URL into the browser bar. So, it had to be opened via double-click, from VSCode or anything else, but the yellow warning appeared and it did not work only when I opened a new tab via Ctrl-T and pasted the URL in. Mar 20, 2021 at 9:50
4

a bit late but this is what i found out...

window.close() will only work (IE is an exception) if the window that you are trying to close() was opened by a script using window.open() method.

!(please see the comment of @killstreet below about anchor tag with target _blank)

TLDR: chrome & firefox allow to close them.

you will get console error: Scripts may not close windows that were not opened by script. as an error and nothing else.

you could add a unique parameter in the URL to know if the page was opened from a script (like time) - but its just a hack and not a native functionality and will fail in some cases.

i couldn't find any way to know if the page was opened from a open() or not, and close will not throw and errors. this will NOT print "test":

try{
  window.close();
}
catch (e){
  console.log("text");
}

you can read in MDN more about the close() function

1
  • 2
    It's not just tabs that have been opened by scripts, also an anchor tag with target _blank will be allowed to be closed. So far tested in chrome and firefox and both seem to allow to close tabs that have been opened by an anchor tag.
    – killstreet
    Apr 16, 2019 at 10:05
4

I just wanted to add that window.close() works in 2021, chrome 91, but not always. One of the cases when it works if there is no history in tab (you can't go back).

In my case I wanted to create self-destructing tab which closes after few seconds, but I was struggling with how to go to development server avoiding new tab, because apparently New tab is also tab and it is being saved in tab history :D I created link in about:blank tab with target=_blank attribute and it was leading to new tab where window.close() method finally worked!

4

It is guaranteed that the closing of tabs will not be tolerated in any future browsers. Using scripts like mentioned above will not work.

My solution was to use a Chrome Extension. A Chrome Extension can require tab manipulation permissions so it will be easy to handle the closing of any tab from the domain in which the extension's content script is active.

This is how the background script should look like:

chrome.runtime.onMessage.addListener(function(message, sender, sendResponse) {
    console.log(sender)
    console.log(message)
    if(message.closeThis) {
        closeTab(sender.tab.id)
    }
});

const closeTab = id => {
    console.log("Closing tab");
    chrome.tabs.remove(id);
}

The content script should look like this:

window.addEventListener("message", (event) => {
    // Only accept messages from ourselves
    if (event.source !== window)
        return;

    if (event.data.type && (event.data.type === "APPLICATION/CLOSE")) {
        console.log("Content script received APPLICATION/CLOSE event");
        chrome.runtime.sendMessage({closeThis: true});
    }
}, false);

Close the tab by calling this in your application (make sure the content scripts are enabled in your domain by specifying that in the manifest):

window.postMessage({ type: "APPLICATION/CLOSE" }, "*");

Be cautious when using this because Chrome Extensions' deployment can be a pain.

2
  • 2
    That's the only reliable option for chrome
    – Georg
    Nov 24, 2021 at 8:27
  • If this were the only viable option, facebook share links that open in a new tab and close after being shared, wouldn't work - and yet they do... in all browsers as far as I know.
    – Bruce
    May 31, 2022 at 18:49
2

This is indeed possible, and is as simple as:

  window.opener = self
  window.close()

(confirm / cancel dialog omitted for brevity)

1

Due to strict browser behaviors, window.close() will only work if it's opened by window.open(...)

But I made a solution for this!

  1. Add an empty hashtag with window.open(...) when it is NOT included
  2. When the perfect time for closing occurs, call window.close
  3. If 2. has returned an error, replace any hashtag or HTTP parameters with an empty hashtag and finally close the window
<button onclick="myFunction()">Close</button>
<script>
if (location.href.indexOf("#") == -1) {
    window.open(location.href + "#", "_self")
}

function myFunction() {
  try {
    window.close()
  } catch (err) {
    window.open(location.href.substring(0, location.href.indexOf("?")).substring(0, location.href.indexOf("#")) + "#", "_self")
    window.close()
  }
}
</script>

Type close in this live demo

4
  • Strangely, this works fine for me in firefox on your demo site, but not when used in my own code. Dec 2, 2022 at 11:57
  • Positive review given. Even if this did not work for me. Best regards Sep 3, 2023 at 3:14
  • I don't know what makes it work in my demo though :/ Sep 21, 2023 at 8:55
  • Nevermind, it doesn't work now. Maybe Chrome patched it? Sep 21, 2023 at 8:56
1

@VityaSchel added the most important note for me: https://stackoverflow.com/a/68035933/14678591

just wanted to add that window.close() works in 2021, chrome 91, but not always. One of the cases when it works if there is no history in tab (you can't go back).

In 2023 this behavior is also present in Firefox and Edge. New tabs without any page history that invoke window.close() indeed close themselves.




This could be a comment but my reputation is not high enough.

2
  • This does not provide an answer to the question. Once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post; instead, provide answers that don't require clarification from the asker. - From Review
    – Borja
    Feb 27, 2023 at 15:32
  • 1
    Luckily I can reply to your comment without sufficient reputation as it is my own answer. This does indeed answer the question. It adds information that is otherwise missing in this thread. Eventhough it can be an answer on its own IMO, as stated, I would have prefered it to be a comment on another answer. What else should I do? Wait for enough reputation and come back? If you are part of the stackoverflow team you should rethink, whether you really want to block new users from adding information to existing answers at all. Maybe a moderation by the OC of an answer would be enough Feb 28, 2023 at 16:17
1

Working for Chrome Version 111.0.xxxx.xxx

open(location, '_self').close();
0

This is one way of solving the same, declare a JavaScript function like this

<script>
  function Exit() {
     var x=confirm('Are You sure want to exit:');
     if(x) window.close();
   }
</script>

Add the following line to the HTML to call the function using a <button>

<button name='closeIt' onClick="Exit()" >Click to exit </Button>
0
0

You can try this solution to trick the browser to close the current window using JavaScript + HTML:

JS:

function closeWindow() {
 if(window.confirm('Are you sure?')) {
  window.alert('Closing window')
  window.open('', '_self')
  window.close()
 }
 else {
  alert('Cancelled!')
 }
}

HTML:

Some content
<button onclick='closeWindow()'>Close Current Window!</button>
More content
2
  • This is overly complex - both in terms of the JS used, but also unnecessarily brining HTML into the mix.
    – Bricky
    May 14, 2021 at 17:59
  • This is the answer which helped me! Jun 22, 2022 at 12:36
0
 
     As stated previously by RixTheTyrunt here, due to security, 
     Modern browser behavior does not allow window.close to work 
     unless is opened by window.open or under other strict 
     circumstances(like opening a new tab with minimal interaction).
     When a page attempts to post a form, once that form interacts;
     window.close does not work(at least for me in several
     browsers: ff, edge, chrome...).

     I liked a lot the solution by Thailandian, but 
     contains document.write which is  frown upon.

     I tried several solutions from this page and from other, 
     but is by design.
     This is what I considered a workaround. The main idea 
     is to let the User know.

     Best regards,
     Thanks for reading.  

 

<script>
  // below will attempt to close if possible 
  function closing() {
    window.close(self);
    window.close('', '_parent', '');
    window.close('', '_self', '');
    // after several attempts will let the User know
    // below, will display a Full Screen Div with a Message for the User
    document.getElementById("msgDiv").style.display = 'block';
    // below, will Hide your Current Page Div to allow only the Previous Message
    document.getElementById("currentPage").style.display = 'none';
    // Below a timer to reload 
    setTimeout(function() {
      document.location.reload(true);
    }, 3000);
  }
</script>


<!-- Below is the Message for the User -->
<div align="center" id="msgDiv" style="display:none;width:100%;height:100vh">
  <h1><br>Unable to close Tab/Window with Scripts.<br><br>Please Close Tab/Window Manually in the Browser.<br><br>Thanks.<br><br><button style="cursor:pointer" onclick='document.location.reload(true);'>Reload</button></h1>
</div>
<!-- Below is the Current Page -->
<div id="currentPage" style="display:block;">
  <div style="position: absolute; right:1%; top: 2px; height: 22px; width: 30px; padding: 0em;" title="EXIT">
    <a href="#" onclick="closing()" style="cursor:pointer;text-decoration: underline;font-weight:900; background: tomato; border: 4px outset red; border-radius: 4px;">&times;</a></div>

  Your Page Content Should be Here <br>
  <br>
  <br>
  <form method="post" action="#">
    <div align="center" style="padding:14%;">
      <input style="font-size:1.5em" type="text" name="text" placeholder="Favorite Word" autofocus="autofocus">
      <input style="font-size:1.5em;cursor:pointer" type="submit" value="Go"></div>
  </form>
  <pre style="white-space:pre-wrap;">
As stated previously by RixTheTyrunt here, due to security, Modern browser behavior does not allow window.close to work unless is opened by window.open or under other strict circumstances(like opening a new tab with minimal interaction).
When a page attempts to post a form, once that form interacts; window.close does not work(at least for me in several browsers: ff, edge, chrome...).

I liked a lot the solution by Thailandian, but contains document.write which is  frown upon.

I tried several solutions from this page and from other, but is by design.
This is what I considered a workaround. The main idea is to let the User know.

Best regards,
Thanks for reading.  
</pre>
</div>

2
  • Sadly enough, this doesn't work for me and instead reloads the page :c Sep 21, 2023 at 9:01
  • Reload is part of the behavior after the Closing attempt. The User should at least see the "Unable to close Tab/Window with Scripts..." Modern browser behavior does not allow window.close to work unless is opened by window.open or under other strict circumstances(like opening a new tab with minimal interaction). When a page attempts to post a form, once that form interacts; window.close does not work(at least for me in several browsers: ff, edge, chrome...). This is considered a workaround without document.write which is frown upon. The idea is to let the User know. Best regards, Nov 19, 2023 at 19:20
-4

Here's how you would create such a link:

<a href="javascript:if(confirm('Close window?'))window.close()">close</a>

0

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