animation-delay
Quick Summary for animation-delay
animation-delay
CSS property specifies the amount of time to wait from applying the animation to an element before beginning to perform the animation. The animation can start later, immediately from its beginning, or immediately and partway through the animation.
Code Usage for animation-delay
/* Single animation */ animation-delay: 3s; animation-delay: 0s; animation-delay: -1500ms; /* Multiple animations */ animation-delay: 2.1s, 480ms; /* Global values */ animation-delay: inherit; animation-delay: initial; animation-delay: revert; animation-delay: unset;
More Details for animation-delay
animation-delay
The animation-delay
CSS property specifies the amount of time to wait from applying the animation to an element before beginning to perform the animation. The animation can start later, immediately from its beginning, or immediately and partway through the animation.
It is often convenient to use the shorthand property animation
to set all animation properties at once.
Syntax
/* Single animation */ animation-delay: 3s; animation-delay: 0s; animation-delay: -1500ms; /* Multiple animations */ animation-delay: 2.1s, 480ms; /* Global values */ animation-delay: inherit; animation-delay: initial; animation-delay: revert; animation-delay: unset;
Values
<time>
The time offset, from the moment at which the animation is applied to the element, at which the animation should begin. This may be specified in either seconds (s
) or milliseconds (ms
). The unit is required.
A positive value indicates that the animation should begin after the specified amount of time has elapsed. A value of 0s
, which is the default, indicates that the animation should begin as soon as it's applied.
A negative value causes the animation to begin immediately, but partway through its cycle. For example, if you specify -1s
as the animation delay time, the animation will begin immediately but will start 1 second into the animation sequence. If you specify a negative value for the animation delay, but the starting value is implicit, the starting value is taken from the moment the animation is applied to the element.
Note: When you specify multiple comma-separated values on an animation-*
property, they will be assigned to the animations specified in the animation-name
property in different ways depending on how many there are. For more information, see Setting multiple animation property values.
Formal definition
Initial value | 0s |
---|---|
Applies to | all elements, ::before and ::after pseudo-elements |
Inherited | no |
Computed value | as specified |
Animation type | discrete |
Formal syntax
<time>#
Examples
The animation has a delay of 2 seconds
HTML<div class="box"></div>
CSS .box { background-color: rebeccapurple; border-radius: 10px; width: 100px; height: 100px; animation-name: rotate; animation-duration: 0.7s; animation-delay: 2s; } @keyframes rotate { 0% { transform: rotate(0); } 100% { transform: rotate(360deg); } }
Result See CSS animations for examples.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Animations Level 2 # animation-delay |
See also
Using CSS animations JavaScriptAnimationEvent
API Select your preferred language English (US)DeutschEspañolFrançais日本語한국어Português (do Brasil)Русский中文 (简体) Change language