91
votes

Say you have the following CSS applied to a div tag

.divtagABS {
    position: absolute;
    margin-left: auto;  
    margin-right: auto;
}

the margin-left and margin-right does not take effect

but if you have relative, it works fine i.e.

.divtagREL {
    position: relative;
    margin-left: auto;  
    margin-right: auto;
}

Why is that? I just want to center an element.

Can someone explain why setting margins to auto in absolute position does not work?

8
just use margin: auto;. with absolute position, all other style elements(regarding position/etc) are ignored.hjpotter92
Wrap it in a <center> tag and set the width of .divtagABS to 100%.Chloe
I can confirm: even though some say that this statement is outdated, I noticed a not-centering failure for position: absolute; on IE Edge.WoodrowShigeru

8 Answers

170
votes

EDIT : this answer used to claim that it isn't possible to center an absolutely positioned element with margin: auto;, but this simply isn't true. Because this is the most up-voted and accepted answer, I guessed I'd just change it to be correct.

When you apply the following CSS to an element

position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
margin: auto;

And then give the element a fixed width and height, such as 200px or 40%, the element will center itself.

Here's a Fiddle that demonstrates the effect.

69
votes

I've used this trick to center an absolutely positioned element. Though, you have to know the element's width.

.divtagABS {
    width: 100px;
    position: absolute;
    left: 50%;
    margin-left: -50px;
  }

Basically, you use left: 50%, then back it out half of it's width with a negative margin.

38
votes

if the absolute element has a width,you can use the code below

.divtagABS{
    width:300px;
    positon:absolute;
    left:0;
    right:0;
    margin:0 auto;
}
20
votes

Working JSFiddle below. When using position absolute, margin: 0 auto will not work, but you can do like this (will also scale):

left: 50%;
transform: translateX(-50%);

Update: Working JSFiddle

1
votes

I already had this same issue and I've got the solution writing a container (.divtagABS-container, in your case) absolutely positioned and then relatively positioning the content inside it (.divtagABS, in your case).

Done! The margin-left and margin-right AUTO for your .divtagABS will now work.

1
votes

All answers were just a suggested solutions or workarounds. But still don't get answer to the question: why margin:auto works with position:relative but does not with position:absolute.

Following explanation was helpful for me:

"Margins make little sense on absolutely positioned elements since such elements are removed from the normal flow, thus they cannot push away any other elements on the page. Using margins like this can only affect the placement of the element to which the margin is applied, not any other element." http://www.justskins.com/forums/css-margins-and-absolute-82168.html

-1
votes

If the element is position absolutely, then it isn't relative, or in reference to any object - including the page itself. So margin: auto; can't decide where the middle is.

Its waiting to be told explicitly, using left and top where to position itself.

You can still center it programatically, using javascript or somesuch.

-4
votes

When you are defining styles for division which is positioned absolutely, they specifying margins are useless. Because they are no longer inside the regular DOM tree.

You can use float to do the trick.

.divtagABS {
    float: left;
    margin-left: auto;  
    margin-right:auto;
 }