What's the difference between <a target="_new">
and <a target="_blank">
and which should I use if I just want to open a link in a new tab/window?
11 Answers
Use "_blank"
According to the HTML5 Spec:
A valid browsing context name is any string with at least one character that does not start with a U+005F LOW LINE character. (Names starting with an underscore are reserved for special keywords.)
A valid browsing context name or keyword is any string that is either a valid browsing context name or that is an ASCII case-insensitive match for one of: _blank, _self, _parent, or _top." - Source
That means that there is no such keyword as _new
in HTML5, and not in HTML4 (and consequently XHTML) either. That means, that there will be no consistent behavior whatsoever if you use this as a value for the target attribute.
Security recommendation
As Daniel and Michael have pointed out in the comments, when using target _blank
pointing to an untrusted website, you should, in addition, set rel="noopener"
. This prevents the opening site to mess with the opener via JavaScript. See this post for more information.
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8Leaving out the bolded text from the spec makes that quote sound confusingly circular. I read it as "A
valid browsing context name
or keyword is any string that is either avalid browsing context name
or ...." Feb 11, 2011 at 1:43 -
7@lyoshenka, @x3ro: I took the liberty to add the previous paragraph to the quote. That should clear up the confusion.– mercatorFeb 11, 2011 at 9:57
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6@aesede: Read the spec. They are not valid, because "my_custom_name" may not be prefixed with an underscore. Thus "new" would be fine, but "_new" is not! Jul 3, 2014 at 21:21
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8Securitywise this is an important read mathiasbynens.github.io/rel-noopener– Daniel FApr 23, 2016 at 18:48
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8Please consider adding that people should also add
rel="noopener noreferrer"
due to javascript attack vulnerability oftarget="_blank"
– MichaelJul 7, 2017 at 13:31
Using target="_blank"
will instruct the browser to create a new browser tab or window when the user clicks on the link.
Using target="_new"
is technically invalid according to the specifications, but as far as I know every browser will behave the same way:
- it will search for a tab or window with the context name "_new"
- if a "_new" tab/window is found, then the URL is loaded into it
- if it's not found, a new tab/window is created with the context name "_new", and the URL loaded into it
Note target="_new"
will behave exactly the same as target="new"
, and the latter is valid HTML while the former is invalid HTML.
Adding some confusion to this, in HTML4 the target
attribute was deprecated. In HTML5 this decision was reversed, and it is an official part of the spec once again. All browsers support target
no matter what version of HTML you are using, but some validators will flag the use as deprecated if your doctype is HTML4.
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5So, basically, if I have two (or more) links with
target="_new"
, they both will open in the same tab, one overwriting the other? Jul 24, 2015 at 12:56 -
6@art-solopov as far as I know, yes that is what will happen in every browser. However "_new" is an illegal value for a target so don't do it. Jul 26, 2015 at 3:08
I know this is an old question and the correct answer, use _blank
, has been mentioned several times, but using <a target="somesite.com" target="_blank">Link</a>
is a security risk.
It is recommended (performance benefits) to use:
<a href="somesite.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Link</a>
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1Just some additional reading on the security risk aspect: jitbit.com/alexblog/…– 8bitheroOct 28, 2018 at 11:50
This may have been asked before but:
"every link that specifies target="_new" looks for and finds that window by name, and opens in it.
If you use target="_blank," a brand new window will be created each time, on top of the current window."
from here: http://thedesignspace.net/MT2archives/000316.html
it's my understanding that target = whatever
will look for a frame/window with that name. If not found, it will open up a new window with that name. If whatever == "_new"
, it will appear just as if you used _blank
except.....
Using one of the reserved target names will bypass the "looking" phase. So, target = "_blank"
on a dozen links will open up a dozen blank windows, but target = whatever
on a dozen links will only open up one window. target = "_new"
on a dozen links may give inconstant behavior. I haven't tried it on several browsers, but should only open up one window.
At least this is how I interpret the rules.
Caution - remember to always include the "quotes" - at least on Chrome, target=_blank
(no quotes) is NOT THE SAME as target="_blank"
(with quotes).
The latter opens each link in a new tab/window. The former (missing quotes) opens the first link you click in one new tab/window, then overwrites that same tab/window with each subsequent link you click (that's named also with the missing quotes).
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Very good point. I ran into this issue when I didn't enclose the _blank in quotes. The link I clicked on from my newly created "blank" tab was over writing content within that tab instead of opening a new tab. Enclosing the _blank in quotes forces chrome to open a new tab every time. Jun 16, 2015 at 4:30
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Also, make sure to use "_blank" not "_BLANK". Chrome is actually fussy about case and won't open a new tab using "_BLANK" multiple times. Jun 16, 2015 at 5:20
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Not sure if this post is still relevant (I use FF, so I can't check), but if still true, this is a violation of the spec for unquoted attribute values; Essentially, anything that isn't a greater-than sign or whitespace is an acceptable unquoted attribute value character (some may produce parse errors, however). May 8 at 1:42
- _blank as a target value will spawn a new window every time,
- _new will only spawn one new window.
Also, every link clicked with a target value of _new will replace the page loaded in the previously spawned window.
You can click here When to use _blank or _new to try it out for yourself.
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@qarma That behaviour is as described in all the browsers I know of,
_new
isn't a magical key word, it's just a name, if a window with that name exists it'll reuse it, otherwise it'll open it. Clicking multiple links for that window will just open different pages in the named window, rather than opening multiple new pages.– scragarJul 31, 2014 at 10:56 -
2The spec actually suggests to browsers that they
ignore
targets that starts with underline but are not keywords. There are no suggestions for what a browser should do when it "ignores" an invalid target name. Possibilities include: (1) treat it like "_blank" (2) treat it like a window name (as if there wasn't an illegal underscore) (3) treat it like a explicitly empty window name (4) treat it like there was no target attribute. -- Any browser could pick any of the interpretations. Jun 17, 2015 at 15:07
The target attribute of a link forces the browser to open the destination page in a new browser window. Using _blank
as a target value will spawn a new window every time while using _new
will only spawn one new window and every link clicked with a target value of _new
will replace the page loaded in the previously spawned window
In order to open a link in a new tab/window you'll use <a target="_blank">
.
value _blank
= targeted browsing context: a new one: tab or window depending on your browsing settings
value _new
= not valid; no such value in HTML5 for target attribute on a element
target attribute with all its values on a element: video demo
The use of _New is useful when working on pages that are Iframed. Since target="_blank" doesn't do the trick and opens the page on the same iframe... target new is the best solution for Iframe Pages. Just my five cents.
_new
doesn't have any special meaning. You could write_white_little_lamb
as well._new
" doesn't have any special meaning?target="_blank"
withoutrel="noopener"
is a potential security vulnerability. Search forrel="noopener"
to learn more.