144
votes

I'm trying to get a div that has position:fixed center aligned on my page.

I've always been able to do it with absolutely positioned divs using this "hack"

left: 50%; width: 400px; margin-left:-200px

...where the value for margin-left is half the width of the div.

This doesn't seem to work for fixed position divs, instead it just places them with their left-most corner at 50% and ignores the margin-left declaration.

Any ideas of how to fix this so I can center align fixed positioned elements?

And I'll throw in a bonus M&M if you can tell me a better way to center align absolutely positioned elements than the way I've outlined above.

14
Works for me. In all but IE6 (obviously).bobince
@Kyle if you could pick an answer it would help other users identify the solution for your issue.andreihondrari

14 Answers

228
votes

Koen's answer doesn't exactly centers the element.

The proper way is to use CCS3 transform property. Although it's not supported in some old browsers. And we don't even need to set a fixed or relative width.

.centered {
    position: fixed;
    left: 50%;
    transform: translate(-50%, 0);
}

Working jsfiddle comparison here.

170
votes

For the ones having this same problem, but with a responsive design, you can also use:

width: 75%;
position: fixed;
left: 50%;
margin-left: -37.5%;

Doing this will always keep your fixed div centered on the screen, even with a responsive design.

51
votes

You could use flexbox for this as well.

.wrapper {
  position: fixed;
  top: 0;
  left: 0;
  height: 100%;
  width: 100%;
  
  /* this is what centers your element in the fixed wrapper*/
  display: flex;
  flex-flow: column nowrap;
  justify-content: center; /* aligns on vertical for column */
  align-items: center; /* aligns on horizontal for column */
  
  /* just for styling to see the limits */
  border: 2px dashed red;
  box-sizing: border-box;
}

.element {
  width: 200px;
  height: 80px;

  /* Just for styling */
  background-color: lightyellow;
  border: 2px dashed purple;
}
<div class="wrapper"> <!-- Fixed element that spans the viewport -->
  <div class="element">Your element</div> <!-- your actual centered element -->
</div>
37
votes

From the post above, I think the best way is

  1. Have a fixed div with width: 100%
  2. Inside the div, make a new static div with margin-left: auto and margin-right: auto, or for table make it align="center".
  3. Tadaaaah, you have centered your fixed div now

Hope this will help.

7
votes

Normal divs should use margin-left: auto and margin-right: auto, but that doesn't work for fixed divs. The way around this is similar to Andrew's answer, but doesn't use the deprecated <center> thing. Basically, just give the fixed div a wrapper.

#wrapper {
    width: 100%;
    position: fixed;
    background: gray;
}
#fixed_div {
    margin-left: auto;
    margin-right: auto;
    position: relative;
    width: 100px;
    height: 30px;
    text-align: center;
    background: lightgreen;
}
<div id="wrapper">
    <div id="fixed_div"></div>
</div

This will center a fixed div within a div while allowing the div to react with the browser. i.e. The div will be centered if there's enough space, but will collide with the edge of the browser if there isn't; similar to how a regular centered div reacts.

7
votes
<div class="container-div">
  <div class="center-div">

  </div>
</div>

.container-div {position:fixed; left: 0; bottom: 0; width: 100%; margin: 0;}
.center-div {width: 200px; margin: 0 auto;}

This should do the same.

5
votes

If you want to center aligning a fixed position div both vertically and horizontally use this

position: fixed;
left: 50%;
top: 50%;
transform: translate(-50%,-50%);
4
votes

If you know the width is 400px this would be the easiest way to do it I guess.

 left: calc(50% - 200px);
4
votes

Center it horizontally:

display: fixed;
top: 0; 
left: 0;
transform: translate(calc(50vw - 50%));

Center it horizontally and vertically (if its height is same as width):

display: fixed;
top: 0; 
left: 0;
transform: translate(calc(50vw - 50%), calc(50vh - 50%));

No side effect: It will not limit element's width when using margins in flexbox

2
votes

This works if you want the element to span across the page like another navigation bar.

width: calc (width: 100% - width whatever else is off centering it)

For example if your side navigation bar is 200px:

width: calc(100% - 200px);

1
votes

It is quite easy using width: 70%; left:15%;

Sets the element width to 70% of the window and leaves 15% on both sides

1
votes

I used the following with Twitter Bootstrap (v3)

<footer id="colophon" style="position: fixed; bottom: 0px; width: 100%;">
    <div class="container">
        <p>Stuff - rows - cols etc</p>
    </div>
</footer>

I.e make a full width element that is fixed position, and just shove a container in it, the container is centered relative to the full width. Should behave ok responsively too.

0
votes

A solution using flex box; fully responsive:

parent_div {
    position: fixed;
    width: 100%;
    display: flex;
    justify-content: center;
}

child_div {
    /* whatever you want */
}
-1
votes

if you don't want to use the wrapper method. then you can do this:

.fixed_center_div {
  position: fixed;
  width: 200px;
  height: 200px;
  left: 50%;
  top: 50%;
  margin-left: -100px; /* 50% of width */
  margin-top: -100px; /* 50% of height */
}