CSS variables
Use Bootstrap’s CSS custom properties for fast and forward-looking design and development.
Bootstrap includes many CSS custom properties (variables) in its compiled CSS for real-time customization without the need to recompile Sass. These provide easy access to commonly used values like our theme colors, breakpoints, and primary font stacks when working in your browser’s inspector, a code sandbox, or general prototyping.
All our custom properties are prefixed with bs-
to avoid conflicts with third party CSS.
Root variables
Here are the variables we include (note that the :root
is required) that can be accessed anywhere Bootstrap’s CSS is loaded. They’re located in our _root.scss
file and included in our compiled dist files.
:root {
--bs-blue: #0d6efd;
--bs-indigo: #6610f2;
--bs-purple: #6f42c1;
--bs-pink: #d63384;
--bs-red: #dc3545;
--bs-orange: #fd7e14;
--bs-yellow: #ffc107;
--bs-green: #198754;
--bs-teal: #20c997;
--bs-cyan: #0dcaf0;
--bs-white: #fff;
--bs-gray: #6c757d;
--bs-gray-dark: #343a40;
--bs-gray-100: #f8f9fa;
--bs-gray-200: #e9ecef;
--bs-gray-300: #dee2e6;
--bs-gray-400: #ced4da;
--bs-gray-500: #adb5bd;
--bs-gray-600: #6c757d;
--bs-gray-700: #495057;
--bs-gray-800: #343a40;
--bs-gray-900: #212529;
--bs-primary: #0d6efd;
--bs-secondary: #6c757d;
--bs-success: #198754;
--bs-info: #0dcaf0;
--bs-warning: #ffc107;
--bs-danger: #dc3545;
--bs-light: #f8f9fa;
--bs-dark: #212529;
--bs-primary-rgb: 13, 110, 253;
--bs-secondary-rgb: 108, 117, 125;
--bs-success-rgb: 25, 135, 84;
--bs-info-rgb: 13, 202, 240;
--bs-warning-rgb: 255, 193, 7;
--bs-danger-rgb: 220, 53, 69;
--bs-light-rgb: 248, 249, 250;
--bs-dark-rgb: 33, 37, 41;
--bs-white-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--bs-black-rgb: 0, 0, 0;
--bs-body-color-rgb: 33, 37, 41;
--bs-body-bg-rgb: 255, 255, 255;
--bs-font-sans-serif: system-ui, -apple-system, "Segoe UI", Roboto, "Helvetica Neue", Arial, "Noto Sans", "Liberation Sans", sans-serif, "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji", "Segoe UI Symbol", "Noto Color Emoji";
--bs-font-monospace: SFMono-Regular, Menlo, Monaco, Consolas, "Liberation Mono", "Courier New", monospace;
--bs-gradient: linear-gradient(180deg, rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.15), rgba(255, 255, 255, 0));
--bs-body-font-family: var(--bs-font-sans-serif);
--bs-body-font-size: 1rem;
--bs-body-font-weight: 400;
--bs-body-line-height: 1.5;
--bs-body-color: #212529;
--bs-body-bg: #fff;
}
Component variables
We’re also beginning to make use of custom properties as local variables for various components. This way we can reduce our compiled CSS, ensure styles aren’t inherited in places like nested tables, and allow some basic restyling and extending of Bootstrap components after Sass compilation.
Have a look at our table documentation for some insight into how we’re using CSS variables.
We’re also using CSS variables across our grids—primarily for gutters—with more component usage coming in the future.
Examples
CSS variables offer similar flexibility to Sass’s variables, but without the need for compilation before being served to the browser. For example, here we’re resetting our page’s font and link styles with CSS variables.
body {
font: 1rem/1.5 var(--bs-font-sans-serif);
}
a {
color: var(--bs-blue);
}
Grid breakpoints
While we include our grid breakpoints as CSS variables (except for xs
), be aware that CSS variables do not work in media queries. This is by design in the CSS spec for variables, but may change in coming years with support for env()
variables. Check out this Stack Overflow answer for some helpful links. In the mean time, you can use these variables in other CSS situations, as well as in your JavaScript.