442

I want to make the navigation bar stick to the top of the viewport once a user scrolls the page, but it's not working and I have no clue why. If you can please help, here is my HTML and CSS code:

.container {
  min-height: 300vh;
}
.nav-selections {
  text-transform: uppercase;
  letter-spacing: 5px;
  font: 18px "lato",sans-serif;
  display: inline-block;
  text-decoration: none;
  color: white;
  padding: 18px;
  float: right;
  margin-left: 50px;
  transition: 1.5s;
}

.nav-selections:hover{
  transition: 1.5s;
  color: black;
}

ul {
  background-color: #B79b58;
  overflow: auto;
}

li {
  list-style-type: none;
}
<main class="container">
  <nav style="position: sticky; position: -webkit-sticky;">
    <ul align="left">
      <li><a href="#/contact" class="nav-selections" style="margin-right:35px;">Contact</a></li>
      <li><a href="#/about" class="nav-selections">About</a></li>
      <li><a href="#/products" class="nav-selections">Products</a></li>
      <li><a href="#" class="nav-selections">Home</a></li>
    </ul>
  </nav>
</main>

1
  • 24
    position:sticky needs a coordonate to tel where to stick
    – G-Cyrillus
    Apr 30, 2017 at 13:56

37 Answers 37

696

Check if an ancestor element has overflow set (e.g. overflow:hidden); try toggling it. You may have to inspect the DOM tree higher than you expect =).

This may affect your position:sticky on a descendant element.

15
  • 6
    This is the right answer. However, it can be difficult to find which parent element is causing the problem. I wrote a jquery script to help identify the overflow property on parents which identified the problem (just run it in your console). Because the script is a few lines I've added an answer containing the script below.
    – danday74
    Jul 7, 2018 at 10:07
  • 15
    I missed the "s" in your "parent elements" Jul 16, 2018 at 17:53
  • 11
    I also missed the "s":( and that was the issue. In many places people write that you should check only parent not all parents. I found my issue by checking if calling $(stickyElement).parents().css("overflow", "visible") in web console would help and it did. Then I located the distant parent with overflow:hidden style that caused the problem. I wish I read this answer more carefully. Jul 24, 2018 at 16:56
  • 14
    If you need check for overflow:hidden, you can run this script in your browser console to check all parents/ancestors of a given element: gist.github.com/brandonjp/478cf6e32d90ab9cb2cd8cbb0799c7a7
    – brandonjp
    Jun 6, 2019 at 0:28
  • 1
    @BenjaminIntal not in my case, I had this overflow-x: hidden in the body tag and it was the reason it was blocking it to work properly. Oct 10, 2019 at 10:17
437

Sticky positioning is a hybrid of relative and fixed positioning. The element is treated as relative positioned until it crosses a specified threshold, at which point it is treated as fixed positioned.
...
You must specify a threshold with at least one of top, right, bottom, or left for sticky positioning to behave as expected. Otherwise, it will be indistinguishable from relative positioning. [source: MDN]

So in your example, you have to define the position where it should stick in the end by using the top property.

html, body {
  height: 200%;
}

nav {
  position: sticky;
  position: -webkit-sticky;
  top: 0; /* required */
}

.nav-selections {
  text-transform: uppercase;
  letter-spacing: 5px;
  font: 18px "lato", sans-serif;
  display: inline-block;
  text-decoration: none;
  color: white;
  padding: 18px;
  float: right;
  margin-left: 50px;
  transition: 1.5s;
}

.nav-selections:hover {
  transition: 1.5s;
  color: black;
}

ul {
  background-color: #B79b58;
  overflow: auto;
}

li {
  list-style-type: none;
}
<nav>
  <ul align="left">
    <li><a href="#/contact" class="nav-selections" style="margin-right:35px;">Contact</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/about" class="nav-selections">About</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/products" class="nav-selections">Products</a></li>
    <li><a href="#" class="nav-selections">Home</a></li>
  </ul>
</nav>

8
  • 247
    In general, this answer is not enough to sticky to work, parent also should not have overflow property.
    – ViliusL
    Apr 10, 2018 at 7:41
  • Thank you for your comment. I agree with you that for other examples than the OP's my answer might not be sufficient. The other answers point this out :)
    – Marvin
    Apr 10, 2018 at 7:49
  • 2
    I think the trick is that position sticky can only be applied to the children which belongs to a scrollable parent with a known height, (a direct children in a flexbox has a know height which is computed from other flex-item)
    – code4j
    Apr 13, 2019 at 14:11
  • @ViliusL thank you for your comment! That was the problem I had with position: sticky, I wouldn't have known that if not for you as I didn't find this information anywhere. Jan 24, 2020 at 16:31
  • sticky position should not have a parent with overflow property, also sticky is not supported in some web browsers Jan 29, 2020 at 6:04
196

I have same problem, and i found the answer here.

If your element isn't sticking as expected the first thing to check are the rules applied to the container.

Specifically, look for any overflow property set on any parents of the element. You can't use: overflow: hidden, overflow: scroll or overflow: auto on the parent of a position: sticky element.

10
  • 2
    The link helped me, too. My problem was solved by "...If you're not using overflow and still having problems it's worth checking if a height is set on the parent..." Oct 18, 2018 at 2:23
  • 1
    I have checked all parents going up and non of them uses overflow attribute. There must be something else.
    – Athlan
    Aug 22, 2020 at 18:15
  • 4
    Note: Unfortunately overflow-x also breaks even for a vertically positioned sticky item. Aug 3, 2021 at 6:20
  • 13
    The example of position: sticky in the API is literally an element inside a overflow: auto-container. Isn't the whole point of position: sticky to live inside scroll containers? This answer confuses me so much.
    – blid
    Aug 11, 2021 at 9:25
  • 2
    overflow on parent wouldn't matter if you just add display: initial to it (the parent). Oct 23, 2021 at 10:20
115

Incase you came across this and your sticky is not working - try setting the parent to:

display: unset

Worked for me

5
  • 2
    Oh! This seems to be a work-around for the case that a parent element has a limited height (e.g. a navbar container or something, as opposed to a whole body or page container) - it seems that stickies don't like to scroll outside their parents (which is utterly ridiculous!) Now everybody just needs to be so lucky as to be able to set the parent to display: unset, which may not always be immediately viable Jul 1, 2020 at 19:38
  • 2
    Also seems to work with contents, initial(?) and inline Jul 1, 2020 at 19:44
  • it works. But why does it work.? Oct 23, 2021 at 10:02
  • display: initial; also works. Oct 23, 2021 at 10:24
  • 2
    Assuming this "works" because the overflow property does not apply to inline elements (which for some reason is what div elements are when set to display: initial (or unset)
    – b4tch
    Apr 6, 2022 at 11:50
51

Few more things I've come across:

When your sticky element is a component (angular etc)

  • If the 'sticky' element itself is a component with a custom element-selector, such as an angular component named <app-menu-bar> you will need to add the following to the component's css:

      :host { display: block; }     // or use flexbox
    

or

    app-menu-bar  { display: block; }   // (in the containing component's css)

Safari on iOS in particular seems to require display:block even on the root element app-root of an angular application or it won't stick.

  • If you are creating a component and defining the css inside the component (shadow DOM / encapsulated styles), make sure the position: sticky is being applied to the 'outer' selector (eg. app-menu-bar in devtools should show the sticky position) and not a top level div within the component. With Angular, this can be achieved with the :host selector in the css for your component.

      :host
      {
          position: sticky;
          display: block;   // this is the same as shown above
          top: 0;
          background: red;    
      }
    

Other

  • If the element following your sticky element has a solid background, you must add the following to stop it from sliding underneath:

      .sticky-element { z-index: 100; }
      .parent-of-sticky-element { position: relative; }
    
  • Your sticky element must be before your content if using top and after it if using bottom.

  • There are complications when using overflow: hidden on your wrapper element – in general it will kill the sticky element inside. Better explained in this question

  • Mobile browsers may disable sticky/fixed positioned items when the onscreen keyboard is visible. I'm not sure of the exact rules (does anybody ever know) but when the keyboard is visible you're looking at a sort of 'window' into the window and you won't easily be able to get things to stick to the actual visible top of the screen.

  • Make sure you have:

    position: sticky;

    and not

    display: sticky;

Misc usability concerns

  • Be cautious if your design calls for for sticking things to the bottom of the screen on mobile devices. On iPhone X for instance they display a narrow line to indicate the swipe region (to get back to the homepage) - and elements inside this region aren't clickable. So if you stick something there be sure to test on iPhone X that users can activate it. A big 'Buy Now' button is no good if people can't click it!
  • If you're advertising on Facebook the webpage is displayed in a 'webview' control within Facebook's mobile apps. Especially when displaying video (where your content begins in the bottom half of the screen only) - they often completely mess up sticky elements by putting your page within a scrollable viewport that actually allows your sticky elements to disappear off the top of the page. Be sure to test in the context of an actual ad and not just in the phone's browser or even Facebook's browser which can all behave differently.
3
  • @Sergey I'm not absolutely clear which of display: block and position: relative triggers the correct behavior in Safari - did it seem that only display: block was needed? Of course it probably doesn't hurt to have both specified Jun 28, 2018 at 20:06
  • 3
    Just display: block was enough
    – Sergey
    Jun 28, 2018 at 20:30
  • I've probably referred back to this answer more than any other of my own. This time it was overflow: hidden. Sep 7, 2022 at 1:37
42

This is a continuation of the answers from MarsAndBack and Miftah Mizwar.

Their answers are correct. However, it is difficult to identify the problem ancestor(s).

To make this very simple, simply run this jQuery script in your browser console and it will tell you the value of the overflow property on every ancestor.

$('.your-sticky-element').parents().filter(function() {
    console.log($(this));
    console.log($(this).css('overflow'));
    return $(this).css('overflow') === 'hidden';
});

Where an ancestor does not have overflow: visible change its CSS so that it does!

Also, as stated elsewhere, make sure your sticky element has this in the CSS:

.your-sticky-element {
    position: sticky;
    top: 0;
}
4
  • 2
    That was very helpful. I was able to quickly identify the parent element that had a value of overflow: invisible. Sep 25, 2018 at 21:01
  • 6
    If you don't have jQuery on your page, you can run this small snippet in the console to add it: (async function() { let response = await fetch('https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.3.1.min.js'); let script = await response.text(); eval(script); })();
    – magikMaker
    Nov 5, 2018 at 16:51
  • 15
    You can also run this snippet that doesn't require JQuery to find non "visible" overflow parent: var p = $0.parentElement; while(p != null) { var ov = getComputedStyle(p).overflow; if(ov !== 'visible') console.warn(ov, p); else console.log(ov, p); p = p.parentElement; } Where $0 is the last element selected in developer tools. Jan 2, 2019 at 15:54
  • One could as well handle position: fixed and appropriate properties with JavaScript. Question doesn't state the need for JavaScript.
    – vintprox
    Jul 19, 2020 at 9:49
28

Another very common scenario where position: sticky might not be working is if it's parent has display: flex or display: grid.

What happens in this case is the sticky position is working but you can't see it bcoz the element is stretched completely. Try reducing it's height using align-self: baseline and you'll see the effect.

1
  • Omg u genius. This worked for me. My parent had grid
    – Bryan
    Mar 24, 2023 at 12:54
24

I had to use the following CSS to get it working:

.parent {
    display: flex;
    justify-content: space-around;
    align-items: flex-start;
    overflow: visible;
}

.sticky {
    position: sticky;
    position: -webkit-sticky;
    top: 0;
}

If above dosen't work then...

Go through all ancestors and make sure none of these elements have overflow: hidden. You have to change this to overflow: visible

2
  • 3
    display: flex makes the thing Nov 25, 2019 at 15:01
  • 2
    align-items: flex-start; in the parent flex container was the thing I was missing Oct 29, 2021 at 8:50
24

Sticky Position will not work if your parent is using display flex. As I read this in one solution

Since flex box elements default to stretch, all the elements are the same height, which can't be scrolled against.

So if you are using display: flex; on parent then you will have to add this to sticky element align-self: flex-start; and also set height to auto height: auto;

This is how sticky element class look like

.stick-ontop {
  position: -webkit-sticky !important; // for safari
  position: sticky !important;
  top: 0;
  align-self: flex-start;
  height: auto;
}
0
20

Attack this Q from other direction.

Imagine this is a game Find the nearest scrolling ancestor.

<!-- sticky not working -->
<h1 style="position: sticky; top:0;">Hello World</h1>

Questions:

  • 1/3: The sticky node? <h1>.
  • 2/3: The ancestor? <body>.
  • 3/3: <body> scrolling ? FALSE => "No effect".

Fix: "Sticky is working" (<body> scrolling ? TRUE).

body{
  min-height: 300vh;
}
<!-- sticky working -->
<h1 style="position: sticky; top: 0;">Hello World</h1>

With this in mind - here are some "hello world" "famous" scenarios of "not working" sticky :) Most cases relate to one or many of these cases.

Case 1: Missing "top" (Easy to fix):

Not working:

/* not working example */
aside{
  position: sticky;
  background: lightgray;
}

main{
  height: 200vh;
}
<aside>
  <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
</aside>

<main>
  <h1>Article</h1>
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
  </p>
</main>

Fix (Add top):

aside{
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
}

main{
  height: 200vh;
}
<aside>
  <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
</aside>

<main>
  <h1>Article</h1>
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
  </p>
</main>

Case 2: Sticky node & overflow (Easy to fix):

I "destroy" the sticky by adding #extra-wrapper with overflow setting auto -or- hidden -or- visible - but without any clipped content.

"The problem" now the nearest scrolling ancestor (#extra-wrapper) "without" any scrolling (No scrollbar dragging option == "no scrolling ancestor").

Not working:

/* not working example */
#overflow-wrapper{
  overflow: scroll;
}

aside{
  position: sticky;
  background: lightgray;
  top: 0px;
}

main{
  height: 200vh;
}
<div id="overflow-wrapper">
  <aside>
    <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
  </aside>

  <main>
    <h1>Article</h1>
    <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
    </p>
  </main>
</div>

Fix - Clip the content (Now their is "nearest scrolling ancestor").

Working:

/* not working example */
#overflow-wrapper{
  overflow: scroll;
  max-height: 60vh; /* clip the content */
}

aside{
  position: sticky;
  background: lightgray;
  top: 0px;
}

main{
  height: 200vh;
}
<div id="overflow-wrapper">
  <aside>
    <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
  </aside>

  <main>
    <h1>Article</h1>
    <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
    </p>
  </main>
</div>

Case 3: Sticky related to "wrong / not scrolling" node (Tricky to fix)

Again, Sticky offset relative to its nearest scrolling ancestor.

I "destroy" the sticky by adding #extra-wrapper to the sticky element. Why it is not working? Now the height of #extra-wrapper == height aside content (box model) == "no scrolling ancestor" == "no effect".

Not working:

/* not working example */
aside{
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
  background: lightgray;
}

main{
  height: 200vh;
}
<div id="extra-wrapper">
  <aside>
    <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
  </aside>
</div>

<main>
  <h1>Article</h1>
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
  </p>
</main>

This is what really "happens" (I added height to #extra-wrapper):

#extra-wrapper{
  background: lightgray;
  height: 40vh;
}
aside{
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
}

main{
  height: 200vh;
}
<div id="extra-wrapper">
  <aside>
    <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
  </aside>
</div>

<main>
  <h1>Article</h1>
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
  </p>
</main>

FIX: change the sticky node:

#extra-wrapper{
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
}
aside{

}

#layout{
  displ
}
main{
height: 200vh;
}
<div id="extra-wrapper">
  <aside>
    <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
  </aside>
</div>

<main>
  <h1>Article</h1>
  <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
  </p>
</main>

Case 4: display: flexbox/Grid layout - even cols by deafult (Tricky to fix)

You create flex/grid layout & set one of the cols to be sticky. By default the cols height is even = The height of the "nearest ancestor" (wrapper) == Cols height = no scroll effect.

Not working:

#extra-wrapper{
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
  border: 1px solid red;
}
aside{

}

#layout{
  display: flex;
}
main{
height: 200vh;
}
<div id="layout">
  <div id="extra-wrapper">
    <aside>
      <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
    </aside>
  </div>

  <main>
    <h1>Article</h1>
    <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
    </p>
  </main>
</div>

FIX: Set the sticky aside max-height to be 90vh for example (Now the cols height is not even).

Working:

#extra-wrapper{
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
  border: 1px solid red;
  max-height: 90vh;
}
aside{

}

#layout{
  display: flex;
}
main{
height: 200vh;
}
<div id="layout">
  <div id="extra-wrapper">
    <aside>
      <h2>sticky Aside</h2>
    </aside>
  </div>

  <main>
    <h1>Article</h1>
    <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Qui dicta minus molestiae vel beatae natus eveniet ratione temporibus aperiam harum alias officiis assumenda officia quibusdam deleniti eos cupiditate dolore doloribus!
    </p>
  </main>
</div>

0
8

It seems like that the navbar to be stickied shouldn't be inside any div or section with other content. None of the solution were working for me until I took the navbar out of the div which the navbar shared with another topbar .I previously had topbar and navbar wrapped with a common div.

4
  • 1
    Thank you, this was what I was looking for! For me there were no parents with overflow, nor were there any height issues. It'd be nice to see this info in the accepted answer as well.
    – saglamcem
    Feb 18, 2019 at 14:20
  • I just found out through experimenting that the sticky won't scroll outside its parent element. It doesn't so much matter how many other siblings it has, but its parent can't, apparently, be a navbar container but has to be something on tle level of a page/content container :( This is ridiculous Jul 1, 2020 at 19:33
  • But Lo! If you can, if you set the limiting parent to display: unset, this restriction is lifted! see stackoverflow.com/a/60560997/2902367 Also seems to work with contents, initial(?) and inline Jul 1, 2020 at 19:40
  • 1
    Here is a useful article explaining this behavior in more detail - medium.com/@elad/… Oct 13, 2020 at 10:52
8

I know this seems to be already answered, but I ran into a specific case, and I feel most answers miss the point.

The overflow:hidden answers cover 90% of the cases. That's more or less the "sticky nav" scenario.

But the sticky behavior is best used within the height of a container. Think of a newsletter form in the right column of your website that scrolls down with the page. If your sticky element is the only child of the container, the container is the exact same size, and there's no room to scroll.

Your container needs to be the height you expect your element to scroll within. Which in my "right column" scenario is the height of the left column. The best way to achieve this is to use display:table-cell on the columns. If you can't, and are stuck with float:right and such like I was, you'll have to either guess the left column height of compute it with Javascript.

2
  • 4
    "If your sticky element is the only child of the container, the container is the exact same size, and there's no room to scroll." GOLD!!! Thank you!
    – remjx
    Mar 12, 2020 at 2:32
  • 1
    Yes! Took me a while to figure this one out. I found it a ridiculous restriction at first, but I suppose there should be at least the option for that. I'd much prefer something like sticky-limit: parent, sticky-limit: body or sticky-limit: nth-parent(3)... Anyway: If you can, you can lift this limitation by setting the limiting parent to display: unset, as noted in stackoverflow.com/a/60560997/2902367 . Also seems to work with contents, initial(?) and inline Jul 1, 2020 at 19:49
7

I know it's too late. But I found a solution even if you are using overflow or display:flex in parent elements sticky will work.

steps:

  1. Create a parent element for the element you want to set sticky (Get sure that the created element is relative to body or to full-width & full-height parent).

  2. Add the following styles to the parent element:

    { position: absolute; height: 100vmax; }

  3. For the sticky element, get sure to add z-index that is higher than all elements in the page.

That's it! Now it must work. Regards

1
  • Thank you! I have tried almost all the information and references on this page. Finding them was useless, although they improved my understanding of the problem. Only your answer is immediately effective for me! ! ! Thank you
    – Lancer.Yan
    Mar 22 at 7:06
6

Just to add to all the answers on this page, if you're having problems with position: sticky not working, then you can check for the following:

  1. Browser support
  2. If threshold is specified — i.e. top, left, bottom or right must be set to a value other than auto
  3. Vendor prefix for Safari/iOS v13 and below — i.e. position: -webkit-sticky
  4. Ancestor element with overflow property must have a height
  5. Parent element must have a height specified (for sticky to have area to scroll within)
  6. In a flexbox, change align-self value if sticky has align-self: auto or align-self: stretch set

I wrote a blog post about this, which may be useful for those who are interested in learning more.

1
  • the fifth item has to be some often to be came accross Dec 12, 2023 at 8:38
5

Funny moment that wasn't obvious for me: at least in Chrome 70 position: sticky is not applied if you've set it using DevTools.

2
  • Do you have a source for this, or any other information about how to work around this? Dec 14, 2018 at 15:57
  • Also curious if this can be backed up somehow
    – mix3d
    May 21, 2021 at 3:20
5

I know this is an old post. But if there's someone like me that just recently started messing around with position: sticky this can be useful.

In my case i was using position: sticky as a grid-item. It was not working and the problem was an overflow-x: hidden on the html element. As soon as i removed that property it worked fine. Having overflow-x: hidden on the body element seemed to work tho, no idea why yet.

0
5

from my comment:

position:sticky needs a coordonate to tel where to stick

nav {
  position: sticky;
  top: 0;
}

.nav-selections {
  text-transform: uppercase;
  letter-spacing: 5px;
  font: 18px "lato", sans-serif;
  display: inline-block;
  text-decoration: none;
  color: white;
  padding: 18px;
  float: right;
  margin-left: 50px;
  transition: 1.5s;
}

.nav-selections:hover {
  transition: 1.5s;
  color: black;
}

ul {
  background-color: #B79b58;
  overflow: auto;
}

li {
  list-style-type: none;
}

body {
  height: 200vh;
}
<nav>
  <ul align="left">
    <li><a href="#/contact" class="nav-selections" style="margin-right:35px;">Contact</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/about" class="nav-selections">About</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/products" class="nav-selections">Products</a></li>
    <li><a href="#" class="nav-selections">Home</a></li>
  </ul>
</nav>

There is polyfill to use for other browsers than FF and Chrome . This is an experimental rules that can be implemented or not at any time through browsers. Chrome add it a couple of years ago and then dropped it, it seems back ... but for how long ?

The closest would be position:relative + coordonates updated while scrolling once reached the sticky point, if you want to turn this into a javascript script

0
5

1.Position sticky will most probably not work if overflow is set to hidden, scroll, or auto on any of the parents of the element.

2.Position sticky may not work correctly if any parent element has a set height.

3
  • The question was "how does it work" and not "how does it not work" :) Please, add some solutions or spare them out. You can also add comments to the questions, instead of adding "Answers" which are not answers. Sep 7, 2021 at 12:38
  • I find the "how does it not work" question to be more legit in this case, since the "how it does work" is pretty simple and you need to find out in most cases what went wrong, thus that question May 11, 2022 at 18:54
  • This answer completely contradicts the API docs for how sticky position operates: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/position "Note that a sticky element "sticks" to its nearest ancestor that has a "scrolling mechanism" (created when overflow is hidden, scroll, auto, or overlay), even if that ancestor isn't the nearest actually scrolling ancestor." Literally sticks to an overflow element.
    – lux
    Aug 2, 2023 at 21:32
3

I believe this article say a lot about how sticky works

How CSS Position Sticky Really Works! CSS position sticky has two main parts, sticky item & sticky container.

Sticky Item — is the element that we defined with the position: sticky styles. The element will float when the viewport position matches the position definition, for example: top: 0px .

Sticky Container —is the HTML element which wraps the sticky item. This is the maximum area that the sticky item can float in.

When you define an element with position: sticky you’re automatically defining the parent element as a sticky container!

3

Just adding my two cents after facing this issue: I was adding position sticky to a sidebar with a flex wrapper.

  1. adding position: sticky is not enough: it needs to top or bottom with a value different than auto to work
  2. position: sticky; top: 0; wasn't enough, I used to have a overflow: hidden on a parent (well, a parent of a parent of the parent of my sidebar to be more accurate)
  3. position: sticky; top: 0; and removing the problematic overflow: hidden wasn't enough: my flex container needed a align-items: flex-start. It makes sense, in a flex context, a flex item that is not stacked in the top of its parent shouldn't behave as a sticky element.

It's just a summary of all other answers.

1
  • 2
    align-items: flex-start is the hidden gem! Sep 12, 2023 at 8:01
2

z-index is also very important. Sometimes it will work but you just won't see it. Try setting it to some very high number just to be sure. Also don't always put top: 0 but try something higher in case it's hidden somewhere (under a toolbar).

2

The real behavior of a sticky element is:

  • First it is relative for a while
  • then it is fixed for a while
  • finally, it disappears from the view

A stickily positioned element is treated as relatively positioned until its containing block crosses a specified threshold (such as setting top to value other than auto) within its flow root (or the container it scrolls within), at which point it is treated as "stuck" until meeting the opposite edge of its containing block.

The element is positioned according to the normal flow of the document, and then offset relative to its nearest scrolling ancestor and containing block (nearest block-level ancestor), including table-related elements, based on the values of top, right, bottom, and left. The offset does not affect the position of any other elements.

This value always creates a new stacking context. Note that a sticky element "sticks" to its nearest ancestor that has a "scrolling mechanism" (created when overflow is hidden, scroll, auto, or overlay), even if that ancestor isn't the nearest actually scrolling ancestor.

This example will help you understand:

code https://codepen.io/darylljann/pen/PpjwPM

2

Using the strategy from this blog (https://www.designcise.com/web/tutorial/how-to-fix-issues-with-css-position-sticky-not-working) I came up with an option for those that can't have control over all components in the page

I'm using Angular and in the ngOnInit method I run this code to change the visible propertys of parents to visible

/**
 * position: sticky
 * only works if all parent components are visibile
 */
let parent = document.querySelector('.sticky').parentElement;
while (parent) {
  const hasOverflow = getComputedStyle(parent).overflow;
  if (hasOverflow !== 'visible') {
    parent.style.overflow = 'visible';
    // console.log(hasOverflow, parent);
  }
  parent = parent.parentElement;
}
2

If any parent/ancestor of the sticky element has any of the following overflow properties set, position: sticky won't work (unless you specify a height on the overflowing container):

  • overflow: hidden
  • overflow: scroll
  • overflow: auto

Snippet to Check for Parents With overflow Property Set:

let parent = document.querySelector('.sticky').parentElement;

while (parent) {
    const hasOverflow = getComputedStyle(parent).overflow;
    if (hasOverflow !== 'visible') {
        console.log(hasOverflow, parent);
    }
    parent = parent.parentElement;
}

There are other methods in this article, but this one worked for me, I used an animation library and had the parent element add the overflow: hidden property without my knowledge, causing sticky to not work.

Quote orgin: https://www.designcise.com/web/tutorial/how-to-fix-issues-with-css-position-sticky-not-working

1

two answer here:

  1. remove overflow property from body tag

  2. set height: 100% to the body to fix the problem with overflow-y: auto

min-height: 100% not-working instead of height: 100%

0
1

Watch out for empty grid areas!

In my case I had something like this:

.cart-areas {
    grid-template-columns: 2fr 0.2fr 1.5fr;
    grid-template-areas:
      'order . summary'
      'order . .'
      'order . .';
}

I wanted that summary grid item to be sticky when the user completes the checkout form. It didn't work because of those empty grid items (marked with .).

The solution was to delete those empty items like so:

.cart-areas {
    grid-template-columns: 2fr 0.2fr 1.5fr;
    grid-template-areas:
      'order . summary'
      'order . summary'
      'order . summary';
}
0

if danday74's fix doesn't work, check that the parent element has a height.

In my case I had two childs, one floating left and one floating right. I wanted the right floating one to become sticky but had to add a <div style="clear: both;"></div> at the end of the parent, to give it height.

1
  • Unsure why this got downvoted by someone, but this was my case exactly: I added float:left to the parent element (without float it's height was 0) and position:sticky worked. Mar 13, 2020 at 13:21
0

I used a JS solution. It works in Firefox and Chrome. Any problems, let me know.

html

<body>
  <header id="header">
    <h1>Extra-Long Page Heading That Wraps</h1>
    <nav id="nav">
      <ul>
        <li><a href="" title="">Home</a></li>
        <li><a href="" title="">Page 2</a></li>
        <li><a href="" title="">Page 3</a></li>
      </ul>
    </nav>
  </header>
  <main>
    <p><!-- ridiculously long content --></p>
  </main>
  <footer>
    <p>FOOTER CONTENT</p>
  </footer>
  <script src="navbar.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
</body>

css

nav a {
    background: #aaa;
    font-size: 1.2rem;
    text-decoration: none;
    padding: 10px;
}

nav a:hover {
    background: #bbb;
}

nav li {
    background: #aaa;
    padding: 10px 0;

}

nav ul  {
    background: #aaa;
    list-style-type: none;
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;

}

@media (min-width: 768px) {

    nav ul {
        display: flex;
    }
}

js

function applyNavbarSticky() {
    let header = document.querySelector('body > header:first-child')
    let navbar = document.querySelector('nav')
    header.style.position = 'sticky'

    function setTop() {
        let headerHeight = header.clientHeight
        let navbarHeight = navbar.clientHeight
        let styleTop = navbarHeight - headerHeight

        header.style.top = `${styleTop}px`
    }

    setTop()

    window.onresize = function () {
        setTop()
    }
}
0

Here's what was tripping ME up... my sticky div was inside another div so that parent div needed some additional content AFTER the sticky div, to make the parent div "tall enough" for the sticky div to "slide over" other content as you scroll down.

So in my case, right after the sticky div, I had to add:

    %div{style:"height:600px;"} 
      &nbsp;

(My application has two side-by-side divs, with a "tall" image on the left, and a short data entry form on the right, and I wanted the data entry form to float next to the image as you scroll down, so the form is always on the screen. It would not work until I added the above "extra content" so the sticky div has something to "slide over"

0

I had the same problem. For me the problem was display: 'none' on big screens (media-query) and display: 'initial' on smartphones. If i removed the display css property and added opacity and pointer events none on desktop everything workedout.

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