88

I'm trying to get a transition hover effect on border that the border expands on hover.

h1 {
  color: #666;
}

h1:after {
  position: absolute;
  left: 10px;
  content: '';
  height: 40px;
  width: 275px;
  border-bottom: solid 3px #019fb6;
  transition: left 250ms ease-in-out, right 250ms ease-in-out;
  opacity: 0;
}

h1:hover:after {
  opacity: 1;
}
<h1>CSS IS AWESOME</h1>

I've tried this on Jsfiddle

0

9 Answers 9

274

To expand the bottom border on hover, you can use transform:scaleX'(); (mdn reference) and transition it from 0 to 1 on the hover state.

Here is an example of what the border hover effect can look like : Expand border hover effect

The border and transition are set on a pseudo element to prevent transitioning the text and avoid adding markup.
To expand the bottom border from left or right, you can change the transform-origin property to the left or right of the pseudo element:

h1 { color: #666;display:inline-block; margin:0;text-transform:uppercase; }
h1:after {
  display:block;
  content: '';
  border-bottom: solid 3px #019fb6;  
  transform: scaleX(0);  
  transition: transform 250ms ease-in-out;
}
h1:hover:after { transform: scaleX(1); }
h1.fromRight:after{ transform-origin:100% 50%; }
h1.fromLeft:after{  transform-origin:  0% 50%; }
<h1 class="fromCenter">Expand from center</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromRight">Expand from right</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromLeft">Expand from left</h1>

Note : You need to add vendor prefixes to maximize browser support (see canIuse).

Expand bottom border on hover with 2 lines

You can achieve this effect when the text spans on 2 lines. The before pseudo element is absolutely positioned to make underline of the first line with bottom:1.2em;:

h1 { position:relative;color: #666;display:inline-block; margin:0;text-transform:uppercase;text-align:center;line-height:1.2em; }
h1:after, h1:before {
  display:block;
  content: '';
  border-bottom: solid 3px #019fb6;  
  transform: scaleX(0);  
  transition: transform 250ms ease-in-out;
}
h1:before{
  position:absolute;
  bottom:1.2em; left:0;
  width:100%;
}
.ef2:hover:after {
  transition-delay:150ms;
}
  
h1:hover:after, h1:hover:before { transform: scaleX(1); }
<h1>Expand border<br/>on two lines</h1>
<br/>
<br/>
<h1 class="ef2">Expand border<br/>effect two</h1>

Different transition direction on hover in and out :

The point is to change the transform-origin position from one side to the other on the hover state. This way the bottom boder enters from one side on hover and exits on the other when the element isn't hovered anymore.
Here is a demo :

h1 { color: #666;display:inline-block; margin:0;text-transform:uppercase; }
h1:after {
  display:block;
  content: '';
  border-bottom: solid 3px #019fb6;  
  transform: scaleX(0);  
  transition: transform 250ms ease-in-out;
}
h1.fromLeft:after{ transform-origin: 100% 50%; }
h1.fromRight:after{  transform-origin:   0% 50%; }
h1.fromLeft:hover:after{ transform: scaleX(1); transform-origin:   0% 50%; }
h1.fromRight:hover:after{ transform: scaleX(1); transform-origin: 100% 50%; }
<h1 class="fromRight">Expand from right</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromLeft">Expand from left</h1>

15
  • 2
    With scaleX(0.0001) I'm getting some artifacts but setting it to scaleX(0) seems to solve this. Jul 29, 2016 at 14:04
  • 1
    @ChristiaanMaks you are right. I am updating the answer
    – web-tiki
    Jul 29, 2016 at 14:29
  • 2
    What if you have <span>This is a sentence that spans one line.</span><span>This is a sentence that spans two lines but starts on the first line</span>
    – Philip
    Aug 4, 2016 at 20:07
  • 2
    @JBis you could do something similar though like this : jsfiddle.net/vxm3b4fe/1 click in the name input.
    – web-tiki
    Nov 21, 2018 at 13:06
  • 3
    I'm trying to use this on the bottom of a div, but it's positioning the line separately from the div and making it shorter than the width of the div. How do I control the layout so that it maintains the same length, position as a standard bottom-border style? Aug 23, 2020 at 22:03
18

We can do this with only background. No pseudo-element needed. This is more flexible.

h1 {
  /* you can change these variables to control the border */
  --border-color: purple;
  --border-width: 5px;
  --bottom-distance: 0px; /* you can increase this */
  
  color: #666;
  display: inline-block;
  background-image: linear-gradient(var(--border-color), var(--border-color));
  background-size: 0% var(--border-width);
  background-repeat: no-repeat;
  transition: background-size 0.3s;
  margin: 5px 0;
}

.fromCenter {
  background-position: 50% calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance));
}

.fromRight {
  background-position: 100% calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance));
}

.fromLeft {
  background-position: 0 calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance))
}

h1:hover {
  background-size: 100% var(--border-width);
}
<h1 class="fromCenter">Expand from center</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromRight">Expand from right</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromLeft">Expand from left</h1>

enter image description here

Multiple line animation:

h1 {
  /* you can change these variables to control the border */
  --border-color: purple;
  --border-width: 5px;
  --bottom-distance: 0px; /* you can increase this */
  
  color: #666;
  display: inline; /* should be 'inline' for multiple line animation */
  background-image: linear-gradient(var(--border-color), var(--border-color));
  background-size: 0% var(--border-width);
  background-repeat: no-repeat;
  transition: background-size 0.5s;
}

.fromCenter {
  background-position: 50% calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance));
}

.fromRight {
  background-position: 100% calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance));
}

.fromLeft {
  background-position: 0 calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance))
}

h1:hover {
  background-size: 100% var(--border-width);
}
<h1 class="fromLeft">Expand from <br>left with <br>multiple line</h1>

enter image description here

0
14

simple and lightweight version

li {
    margin-bottom: 10px;
}

.cool-link {
    display: inline-block;
    color: #000;
    text-decoration: none;
}

.cool-link::after {
    content: '';
    display: block;
    width: 0;
    height: 2px;
    background: #000;
    transition: width .3s;
}

.cool-link:hover::after {
    width: 100%;
    //transition: width .3s;
}
<ul>
    <li><a class="cool-link" href="#">A cool link</a></li>
    <li><a class="cool-link" href="#">A cool link</a></li>
    <li><a class="cool-link" href="#">A cool link</a></li>
</ul>

1
  • 2
    Thanks! The accepted answer didn't work for me, but this did. If anyone else is having issues give this a try.
    – Evan
    Jun 24, 2019 at 3:12
6

I know this is an old post and it is already answered but you might like the following effect too.

<div class="cd-single-point">
    <a class="cd-img-replace" href="#0"></a>
</div>

   .cd-single-point {
    position: absolute;
    list-style-type: none;
    left: 20px;
    top: 20px;
  }

  .cd-single-point>a {
      position: relative;
      z-index: 2;
      display: block;
      width: 10px;
      height: 10px;
      border-radius: 50%;
      background: #0079ff;
      -webkit-transition: background-color 0.2s;
      -moz-transition: background-color 0.2s;
      -o-transition: background-color 0.2s;
      transition: background-color 0.2s;
  }

  .cd-single-point::after {
    content: '';
    position: absolute;
    border-radius: 50%;
    width: 100%;
    height: 100%;
    top: 0;
    left: 0;
    animation: cd-pulse 2s infinite;
  }

  @keyframes cd-pulse
  {
  0%  {box-shadow:0 0 0 0 #0079ff}
  100%{box-shadow:0 0 0 20px rgba(255,150,44,0)}
  }

DEMO

0
6

h1 {
  color: #666;
  display:inline-block;
  margin:0;
  text-transform:uppercase;
 }
h1:after {
  display:block;
  content: '';
  border-bottom: solid 3px #92a8d1;  
  transform: scaleX(0);  
  transition: transform 800ms ease-in-out;
}
h1:hover:after {
 transform: scaleX(1);
}
<h1 class="fromCenter">Hover Over Me</h1><br/>

3

we can do using simple transition effect.

HTML

<h1>CSS IS AWESOME</h1>

CSS

h1 {
    color: #666;
    position: relative;
    display: inline-block;
}

h1:after {
    position: absolute;
    left: 50%;
    content: '';
    height: 40px;
    height: 5px;
    background: #f00;
    transition: all 0.5s linear;
    width: 0;
    bottom: 0;  
}

h1:hover:after {
    width: 270px;
    margin-left: -135px;
}

Link to Fiddle

0
3

h1 {
  /* you can change these variables to control the border */
  --border-color: purple;
  --border-width: 5px;
  --bottom-distance: 0px; /* you can increase this */
  
  color: #666;
  display: inline-block;
  background-image: linear-gradient(var(--border-color), var(--border-color));
  background-size: 0% var(--border-width);
  background-repeat: no-repeat;
  transition: background-size 0.3s;
  margin: 5px 0;
}

.fromCenter {
  background-position: 50% calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance));
}

.fromRight {
  background-position: 100% calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance));
}

.fromLeft {
  background-position: 0 calc(100% - var(--bottom-distance))
}

h1:hover {
  background-size: 100% var(--border-width);
}
<h1 class="fromCenter">Expand from center</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromRight">Expand from right</h1><br/>
<h1 class="fromLeft">Expand from left</h1>

1
transition: all 1000ms ease-in-out; 

Demo

or are you looking for this

Demo2

1

h1 {
  color: #666;
}

h1:after {
  position: absolute;
  left: 10px;
  content: '';
  height: 40px;
  width: 275px;
  border-bottom: solid 3px #019fb6;
  transition: all 550ms ease-in-out;
  border-bottom-width: 0px;
}

h1:hover:after {
  border-bottom-width: 5px;
}
<h1>CSS IS AWESOME</h1>

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