173

Using jQuery, I would like to disable scrolling of the body:

My idea is to:

  1. Set body{ overflow: hidden;}
  2. Capture the current scrollTop();/scrollLeft()
  3. Bind to the body scroll event, set scrollTop/scrollLeft to the captured value.

Is there a better way?


Update:

Please see my example, and a reason why, at http://jsbin.com/ikuma4/2/edit

I am aware someone will be thinking "why does he not just use position: fixed on the panel?".

Please do not suggest this as I have other reasons.

17
  • 7
    "Is there a better way?" - other than letting the browser behave normally?
    – Fenton
    Sep 7, 2010 at 7:31
  • 23
    "melodramatically"? Sep 7, 2010 at 7:32
  • 6
    Perhaps meant programmatically? Since it is the firefox top spelling correction suggestion for 'programatically' Sep 7, 2010 at 7:35
  • 4
    This thread is going \b\
    – Cipi
    Sep 7, 2010 at 7:43
  • 4
    @Sohnee disabling scrolling !== bad
    – Mansiemans
    Feb 17, 2012 at 14:20

24 Answers 24

256

This will completely disable scrolling:

$('html, body').css({
    overflow: 'hidden',
    height: '100%'
});

To restore:

$('html, body').css({
    overflow: 'auto',
    height: 'auto'
});

Tested it on Firefox and Chrome.

18
  • 7
    Still scrolls with middle mouse button on chrome.
    – Lothar
    Sep 9, 2013 at 16:58
  • 18
    This loses the current scroll position. OP explicitly mentioned about capturing scroll position, so I assume he required that. Anyways, I require it, so this is of limited use to me
    – zerm
    Nov 26, 2013 at 11:28
  • 9
    PS Omitting the height: 100% effectively locks the scrolling at the current position without the jumping - on latest Chrome, at least.
    – zerm
    Nov 26, 2013 at 11:33
  • 2
    This is NOT the correct answer. Scroll position is not captured May 26, 2014 at 17:59
  • 1
    Works like a charm. This just reminded that both 'html' and 'body' are equally important. Oct 12, 2017 at 9:29
147

The only way I've found to do this is similar to what you described:

  1. Grab current scroll position (don't forget horizontal axis!).
  2. Set overflow to hidden (probably want to retain previous overflow value).
  3. Scroll document to stored scroll position with scrollTo().

Then when you're ready to allow scrolling again, undo all that.

Edit: no reason I can't give you the code since I went to the trouble to dig it up...

// lock scroll position, but retain settings for later
var scrollPosition = [
  self.pageXOffset || document.documentElement.scrollLeft || document.body.scrollLeft,
  self.pageYOffset || document.documentElement.scrollTop  || document.body.scrollTop
];
var html = jQuery('html'); // it would make more sense to apply this to body, but IE7 won't have that
html.data('scroll-position', scrollPosition);
html.data('previous-overflow', html.css('overflow'));
html.css('overflow', 'hidden');
window.scrollTo(scrollPosition[0], scrollPosition[1]);


// un-lock scroll position
var html = jQuery('html');
var scrollPosition = html.data('scroll-position');
html.css('overflow', html.data('previous-overflow'));
window.scrollTo(scrollPosition[0], scrollPosition[1])
10
  • 2
    please see jsbin.com/ikuma4/2/edit and explain any reason to me that yours is better? am i missing something (i ask as i can not see any reason for the length of your answer as compared to my example)
    – Hailwood
    Sep 7, 2010 at 7:55
  • 3
    Your approach doesn't work in IE7. I tried that first too. The problem is that it doesn't react to the scroll event quickly enough. It lets the document scroll, then snaps it back when your JS resets the scroll position back where you want it.
    – tfe
    Sep 7, 2010 at 12:38
  • 1
    Also, if body had an overflow of anything other than auto, it would be overwritten. I needed to preserve the existing setting, so that adds some overhead too.
    – tfe
    Sep 7, 2010 at 12:43
  • Does anyone know why simply styling html and body with overflow: hidden is insufficient? We still end up needing the event handler.
    – kpozin
    Jul 18, 2011 at 16:41
  • 4
    This is a fantastic answer. And to make it work on touch devices, check out this answer.
    – Patrick
    Jan 28, 2013 at 10:54
46

try this

$('#element').on('scroll touchmove mousewheel', function(e){
  e.preventDefault();
  e.stopPropagation();
  return false;
})
6
  • just what I was looking for... almost. Anyway to disable it during arrow keys?
    – Cody
    Jul 2, 2014 at 16:13
  • 2
    @Cody - combine this with css overflow: hidden
    – Dariux
    Jul 11, 2014 at 7:19
  • 2
    @cubbiu how to reverse it ?
    – Meer
    Oct 21, 2014 at 2:38
  • 3
    You can use $('#element').off('scroll touchmove mousewheel');
    – arnuschky
    Oct 30, 2014 at 19:56
  • 2
    Great solution. Although how would you only disable body scrolling yet allow scrolling within other child elements that have overflow: scroll?
    – Fizzix
    Apr 18, 2016 at 0:52
28

I just provide a little tuning to the solution by tfe. In particular, I added some additional control to ensure that there is no shifting of the page content (aka page shift) when the scrollbar is set to hidden.

Two Javascript functions lockScroll() and unlockScroll() can be defined, respectively, to lock and unlock the page scroll.

function lockScroll(){
    $html = $('html'); 
    $body = $('body'); 
    var initWidth = $body.outerWidth();
    var initHeight = $body.outerHeight();

    var scrollPosition = [
        self.pageXOffset || document.documentElement.scrollLeft || document.body.scrollLeft,
        self.pageYOffset || document.documentElement.scrollTop  || document.body.scrollTop
    ];
    $html.data('scroll-position', scrollPosition);
    $html.data('previous-overflow', $html.css('overflow'));
    $html.css('overflow', 'hidden');
    window.scrollTo(scrollPosition[0], scrollPosition[1]);   

    var marginR = $body.outerWidth()-initWidth;
    var marginB = $body.outerHeight()-initHeight; 
    $body.css({'margin-right': marginR,'margin-bottom': marginB});
} 

function unlockScroll(){
    $html = $('html');
    $body = $('body');
    $html.css('overflow', $html.data('previous-overflow'));
    var scrollPosition = $html.data('scroll-position');
    window.scrollTo(scrollPosition[0], scrollPosition[1]);    

    $body.css({'margin-right': 0, 'margin-bottom': 0});
}

where I assumed that the <body> has no initial margin.

Notice that, while the above solution works in most of the practical cases, it is not definitive since it needs some further customization for pages that include, for instance, an header with position:fixed. Let's go into this special case with an example. Suppose to have

<body>
<div id="header">My fixedheader</div>
<!--- OTHER CONTENT -->
</body>

with

#header{position:fixed; padding:0; margin:0; width:100%}

Then, one should add the following in functions lockScroll() and unlockScroll():

function lockScroll(){
    //Omissis   


    $('#header').css('margin-right', marginR);
} 

function unlockScroll(){
    //Omissis   

    $('#header').css('margin-right', 0);
}

Finally, take care of some possible initial value for the margins or paddings.

2
  • 4
    You have an error in your javascript $body.css({'margin-right': 0, 'margin-bottom', 0}); should be $body.css({'margin-right': 0, 'margin-bottom': 0});
    – Johansrk
    Oct 7, 2013 at 8:59
  • Actually, just use marginRight and marginLeft :)
    – Martijn
    Apr 11, 2016 at 13:40
27

you can use this code:

$("body").css("overflow", "hidden");
3
  • 8
    You can still use the middle mouse button to scroll.
    – Roger Far
    Dec 1, 2012 at 11:35
  • 2
    No, This is ok and no scroll with this!
    – mr.soroush
    Jan 9, 2013 at 16:59
  • If you use some extra css you CAN completely disable scrolling, see my answer for more details.
    – gitaarik
    Jun 25, 2013 at 9:28
24

To turn OFF scrolling try this:

var current = $(window).scrollTop();
$(window).scroll(function() {
    $(window).scrollTop(current);
});

to reset:

$(window).off('scroll');
1
  • @EveryScreamer no, it makes the screen shake like crazy. Trying to find a workaround. May 8, 2019 at 18:18
5

I've written a jQuery plugin to handle this: $.disablescroll.

It prevents scrolling from mousewheel, touchmove, and keypress events, such as Page Down.

There's a demo here.

Usage:

$(window).disablescroll();

// To re-enable scrolling:
$(window).disablescroll("undo");
4
  • I've tried to use your disablescroll() plugin to temporarily disable scrolling on hearing the mouswheel/scroll event, but it doesn't work. Any chance you know a way to achieve that effect? Jun 3, 2014 at 17:14
  • @J.B. I can probably help, but comments are not the best place. Join me in this stack overflow chat and I'll see what I can do: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/55043/disablescroll-usage Jun 4, 2014 at 8:12
  • I'm sorry, but this plugin doesn't even work in your jsfiddle.
    – markj
    Jun 23, 2014 at 10:15
  • You can help me to inspect this by telling me which browser/platform it doesn't seem to work in please? Jun 26, 2014 at 8:20
5

You can attach a function to scroll events and prevent its default behaviour.

var $window = $(window);

$window.on("mousewheel DOMMouseScroll", onMouseWheel);

function onMouseWheel(e) {
    e.preventDefault();
}

https://jsfiddle.net/22cLw9em/

1
4

Somebody posted this code, which has the problem of not retaining the scroll position when restored. The reason is that people tend to apply it to html and body or just the body but it should be applied to html only. This way when restored the scroll position will be kept:

$('html').css({
    'overflow': 'hidden',
    'height': '100%'
});

To restore:

$('html').css({
    'overflow': 'auto',
    'height': 'auto'
});
2
  • 1
    not 'overflow': 'auto', use 'overflow': 'initial',
    – evtuhovdo
    Sep 10, 2019 at 7:40
  • 1
    @evtuhovdo this is what i'm missing . thanks
    – Franz
    Dec 2, 2020 at 12:45
4

One liner to disable scrolling including middle mouse button.

$(document).scroll(function () { $(document).scrollTop(0); });

edit: There's no need for jQuery anyway, below same as above in vanilla JS(that means no frameworks, just JavaScript):

document.addEventListener('scroll', function () { this.documentElement.scrollTop = 0; this.body.scrollTop = 0; })

this.documentElement.scrollTop - standard

this.body.scrollTop - IE compatibility

4
  • To Hide Scroll: $("body").css("overflow", "hidden");
  • To Restore Scroll: $("body").css("overflow", "initial");
0
3

Can't you just set the body height to 100% and overflow hidden? See http://jsbin.com/ikuma4/13/edit

1
  • $("html").css({ height: '100%', overflow: 'hidden' }); It simply works, thank you Adrian
    – Alexey
    Dec 12, 2013 at 15:33
2

This may or may not work for your purposes, but you can extend jScrollPane to fire other functionality before it does its scrolling. I've only just tested this a little bit, but I can confirm that you can jump in and prevent the scrolling entirely. All I did was:

  • Download the demo zip: http://github.com/vitch/jScrollPane/archives/master
  • Open the "Events" demo (events.html)
  • Edit it to use the non-minified script source: <script type="text/javascript" src="script/jquery.jscrollpane.js"></script>
  • Within jquery.jscrollpane.js, insert a "return;" at line 666 (auspicious line number! but in case your version differs slightly, this is the first line of the positionDragY(destY, animate) function

Fire up events.html, and you'll see a normally scrolling box which due to your coding intervention won't scroll.

You can control the entire browser's scrollbars this way (see fullpage_scroll.html).

So, presumably the next step is to add a call to some other function that goes off and does your anchoring magic, then decides whether to continue with the scroll or not. You've also got API calls to set scrollTop and scrollLeft.

If you want more help, post where you get up to!

Hope this has helped.

2

I put an answer that might help here: jQuery simplemodal disable scrolling

It shows how to turn off the scroll bars without shifting the text around. You can ignore the parts about simplemodal.

1

If you just want to disable scrolling with keyboard navigation, you can override keydown event.

$(document).on('keydown', function(e){
    e.preventDefault();
    e.stopPropagation();
});
1

Try this code:

    $(function() { 
        // ...

        var $body = $(document);
        $body.bind('scroll', function() {
            if ($body.scrollLeft() !== 0) {
                $body.scrollLeft(0);
            }
        });

        // ...
    });
1

I am using the following code to disable scrolling and it works fine

    $('html').css({
      'overflow': 'hidden',
      'height': '100%'
    });

except that on my android tablet, url address bar and top window tags remain visible, and when users scroll up and down, the window also scrolls for about 40px up and down, and shows/hides the url bar and the tags. Is there a way to prevent that and have scrolling fully disabled ?

0

You can cover-up the window with a scrollable div for preventing scrolling of the content on a page. And, by hiding and showing, you can lock/unlock your scroll.

Do something like this:

#scrollLock {
    width: 100%;
    height: 100%;
    position: fixed;
    overflow: scroll;
    opacity: 0;
    display:none
}

#scrollLock > div {
    height: 99999px;
}

function scrollLock(){
    $('#scrollLock').scrollTop('10000').show();
}

function scrollUnlock(){
    $('#scrollLock').hide();
}
1
  • 7
    Please don't use abbreviations like "u" and "smth". Take the time to spell correctly, for readability. Oct 15, 2012 at 23:00
0

For folks who have centered layouts (via margin:0 auto;), here's a mash-up of the position:fixed solution along with @tfe's proposed solution.

Use this solution if you're experiencing page-snapping (due to the scrollbar showing/hiding).

// lock scroll position, but retain settings for later
var scrollPosition = [
    window.pageXOffset || document.documentElement.scrollLeft || document.body.scrollLeft,
    window.pageYOffset || document.documentElement.scrollTop  || document.body.scrollTop
];
var $html = $('html'); // bow to the demon known as MSIE(v7)
$html.addClass('modal-noscroll');
$html.data('scroll-position', scrollPosition);
$html.data('margin-top', $html.css('margin-top'));
$html.css('margin-top', -1 * scrollPosition[1]);

…combined with…

// un-lock scroll position
var $html = $('html').removeClass('modal-noscroll');
var scrollPosition = $html.data('scroll-position');
var marginTop = $html.data('margin-top');
$html.css('margin-top', marginTop);
window.scrollTo(scrollPosition[0], scrollPosition[1])

…and finally, the CSS for .modal-noscroll

.modal-noscroll
{
    position: fixed;
    overflow-y: scroll;
    width: 100%;
}

I would venture to say this is more of a proper fix than any of the other solutions out there, but I haven't tested it that thoroughly yet… :P


Edit: please note that I have no clue how badly this might perform (read: blow up) on a touch device.

0

You can also use DOM to do so. Say you have a function you call like this:

function disable_scroll() {
document.body.style.overflow="hidden";
}

And that's all there is to it! Hope this helps in addition to all the other answers!

0

This is what I ended up doing:

CoffeeScript:

    $("input").focus ->
        $("html, body").css "overflow-y","hidden"
        $(document).on "scroll.stopped touchmove.stopped mousewheel.stopped", (event) ->
            event.preventDefault()

    $("input").blur ->
        $("html, body").css "overflow-y","auto"
        $(document).off "scroll.stopped touchmove.stopped mousewheel.stopped"

Javascript:

$("input").focus(function() {
 $("html, body").css("overflow-y", "hidden");
 $(document).on("scroll.stopped touchmove.stopped mousewheel.stopped", function(event) {
   return event.preventDefault();
 });
});

$("input").blur(function() {
 $("html, body").css("overflow-y", "auto");
 $(document).off("scroll.stopped touchmove.stopped mousewheel.stopped");
});
0

Not sure if anybody has tried out my solution. This one works on the whole body/html but no doubt it can be applied to any element that fires a scroll event.

Just set and unset scrollLock as you need.

var scrollLock = false;
var scrollMem = {left: 0, top: 0};

$(window).scroll(function(){
    if (scrollLock) {
        window.scrollTo(scrollMem.left, scrollMem.top);
    } else {
        scrollMem = {
            left: self.pageXOffset || document.documentElement.scrollLeft || document.body.scrollLeft,
            top: self.pageYOffset || document.documentElement.scrollTop || document.body.scrollTop
        };
    }
});

Here's the example JSFiddle

Hope this one helps somebody.

1
  • This one works as it should, with one exception. When the scroll is locked, and i scroll, it kinda twitches a little, before actually locking the scroll...
    – Teilmann
    May 11, 2016 at 9:30
0

I think the best and clean solution is:

window.addEventListener('scroll',() => {
    var x = window.scrollX;
    var y = window.scrollY;
    window.scrollTo(x,y);
});

And with jQuery:

$(window).on('scroll',() => {
    var x = window.scrollX;
    var y = window.scrollY;
    window.scrollTo(x,y)
})

Those event listener should block scrolling. Just remove them to re enable scrolling

0

If want to programmatically disable scrolling you can use:

overflow: clip;

If you wanted to disable scrolling for the user you can use:

overflow: hidden;

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/overflow

The browser support for the overflow property varies:

https://caniuse.com/?search=overflow

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