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The issue is that when I invoke window.close() or self.close() it doesn't close the window. Now there seems to be a belief that in Chrome you can't close by script any window that is not script created. That is patently false but regardless it is supposed to still do it, even if it requires to pop up an alert to confirm. These are not happening.

So does anyone have real, functional and proven method of closing a window using something like javascript:window.close() or javascript:self.close() that actually does what is expected and something that happens just fine in every browser that is NOT Chrome based? Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated and I am looking for Javascript specific solution, nothing JQuery or third party implementation.

Update: While much of what has been suggested has serious limitations and usability issues, the latest suggestion (specific to TamperMonkey) using // @grant window.close in the script header will often do the trick even on those tabs that normally can't handle the close method. While not entirely ideal and doesn't generalized to every case, it is a good solution in my case.

GµårÐïåñ
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    `window.close()` works for me in chrome. – mash Nov 04 '13 at 03:34
  • `window.close` is not part of any standard, so there's no guarantee of consistency (or even implementation) across browsers. – Blender Nov 04 '13 at 03:35
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    @GµårÐïåñ: Umm, no it isn't. It has nothing to do with the language. It's a function implemented by browsers. If you can write a minimal example showing how `window.close` isn't working the way it should, I think that may be more helpful than saying, "it doesn't work". – Blender Nov 04 '13 at 09:17
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    I gave you TWO examples. Spelling it out for you, `CLOSE` – GµårÐïåñ Nov 04 '13 at 23:53
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    guardian that is improper javascript. Try window.close() and it works. window.close is just a variable name and will not call the function (at least it does not when I test it in chrome 37). When I change your example to window.close() it works in chrome 37. – George Oct 11 '14 at 11:14
  • @George what you have said is moot and adds nothing. – GµårÐïåñ Oct 11 '14 at 18:28
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    GµårÐïåñ What @George said is NOT moot (unless I've totally misunderstood the meaning of the word). He is correct in stating that you have a syntactic error in the javascript in your examples, and if you have the same error in your application-code, then this is more than likely the cause of your issue. IF, however, these are just typos in your examples, then you should correct those typos to get better answers. – Superole Feb 06 '15 at 12:54

16 Answers16

204

Ordinary javascript cannot close windows willy-nilly. This is a security feature, introduced a while ago, to stop various malicious exploits and annoyances.

From the latest working spec for window.close():

The close() method on Window objects should, if all the following conditions are met, close the browsing context A:

  • The corresponding browsing context A is script-closable.
  • The browsing context of the incumbent script is familiar with the browsing context A.
  • The browsing context of the incumbent script is allowed to navigate the browsing context A.

A browsing context is script-closable if it is an auxiliary browsing context that was created by a script (as opposed to by an action of the user), or if it is a browsing context whose session history contains only one Document.

This means, with one small exception, javascript must not be allowed to close a window that was not opened by that same javascript.

Chrome allows that exception -- which it doesn't apply to userscripts -- however Firefox does not. The Firefox implementation flat out states:

This method is only allowed to be called for windows that were opened by a script using the window.open method.


If you try to use window.close from a Greasemonkey / Tampermonkey / userscript you will get:
Firefox: The error message, "Scripts may not close windows that were not opened by script."
Chrome: just silently fails.



The long-term solution:

The best way to deal with this is to make a Chrome extension and/or Firefox add-on instead. These can reliably close the current window.

However, since the security risks, posed by window.close, are much less for a Greasemonkey/Tampermonkey script; Greasemonkey and Tampermonkey could reasonably provide this functionality in their API (essentially packaging the extension work for you).
Consider making a feature request.



The hacky workarounds:

Chrome is currently was vulnerable to the "self redirection" exploit. So code like this used to work in general:

open(location, '_self').close();

This is buggy behavior, IMO, and is now (as of roughly April 2015) mostly blocked. It will still work from injected code only if the tab is freshly opened and has no pages in the browsing history. So it's only useful in a very small set of circumstances.

However, a variation still works on Chrome (v43 & v44) plus Tampermonkey (v3.11 or later). Use an explicit @grant and plain window.close(). EG:

// ==UserScript==
// @name        window.close demo
// @include     http://YOUR_SERVER.COM/YOUR_PATH/*
// @grant       GM_addStyle
// ==/UserScript==

setTimeout (window.close, 5000);

Thanks to zanetu for the update. Note that this will not work if there is only one tab open. It only closes additional tabs.


Firefox is secure against that exploit. So, the only javascript way is to cripple the security settings, one browser at a time.

You can open up about:config and set
allow_scripts_to_close_windows to true.

If your script is for personal use, go ahead and do that. If you ask anyone else to turn that setting on, they would be smart, and justified, to decline with prejudice.

There currently is no equivalent setting for Chrome.

Community
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Brock Adams
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    Hey my friend, glad to finally hear from you. Just a note, on Fx you can bypass that limitation by flipping the `dom.allow_scripts_to_close_windows;false` to `true` but I guess nothing in Chrome without hacking the source/rebuild which is how I got around it for now. I know and have talked to the TM developer and in the recent alpha/beta we have put it as a compatibility option (setting of the script) to run in man-in-the-middle style, works. I guess short of the hacks we have no clean solution, pity. – GµårÐïåñ Nov 05 '13 at 00:13
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    If anyone is having trouble with window.close or the particular behavior difference among browsers, read this answer very carefully - it really does have all the right information. – Bron Davies Feb 25 '14 at 16:06
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    Is there a way to check if the window was opened by script or not ? (I need to show/hide a back button, I don't want to use the hack) Thanks EDIT: window.opener === null – Jscti Jun 24 '14 at 08:07
  • Since Chrome 36.0.1985.125 WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014, **The hacky workarounds** may not work, detail in my answer. – swcool Jul 20 '14 at 23:18
  • @swcool, just retested on Chrome `36.0.1985.125 m`. The hack still works; but it's reasonable to assume it will be blocked *sometime* in the future. – Brock Adams Jul 21 '14 at 00:28
  • @brock-adams, interesting. For my extension project, I have to make change for this Chrome new update, otherwise it won't work any more. Thanks for your reply. – swcool Jul 21 '14 at 14:34
  • I use Firefox and i put both `allow_scripts_to_close_windows;true` and `open(location, '_self').close();` to make it work. Thanks a lot. – m3nda Feb 25 '15 at 14:04
  • The hacky chrome solution doesn't work. Can I turn a tampermonkey script to an extension and this will give it the privilege to close a tab? – shinzou Aug 23 '15 at 17:55
  • @kuhaku, try *injecting* the workaround. I haven't retested on latest Chrome in a while, but swcool erroneously reported that the hole has been plugged. Yes, extensions can close just about any tab. – Brock Adams Aug 23 '15 at 17:57
  • By injecting it you mean like this? http://pastebin.com/XgRJu31a it doesn't work. It just keep refreshing the page endlessly. – shinzou Aug 23 '15 at 18:00
  • @kuhaku: No, use `addJS_Node()` from [this answer](http://stackoverflow.com/a/13485650/331508). – Brock Adams Aug 23 '15 at 18:02
  • I either do something wrong or it doesn't work, I bet it's the first option: http://pastebin.com/8VmBkV6j – shinzou Aug 23 '15 at 18:15
  • @kuhaku: Yes, you still need to create a `GM_main()` function and put the location hack inside it. However, I just retested and this will now only work if the tab was freshly opened. That is the tab is still on its first page and has nothing in the tab's browsing history. If that is not your case, then your only recourse is to write an extension. – Brock Adams Aug 23 '15 at 18:19
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    `window.close()` will work in Tampermonkey if you set `@grant` to a value other than `none`. See [this thread](https://forum.tampermonkey.net/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=1305). – zanetu Aug 27 '15 at 20:59
  • @Brock Adams What do you mean by "navigation"? I tried a global userscript (i.e. http://hastebin.com/raw/uwexuyusen) containing `setTimeout(window.close, 5000)` and randomly scrolling and clicking links on a page (including links pointing to parts of the current page, and links pointing to another website) but it always works (in Chrome v44.0.2403.155 and Tampermokey BETA v3.12.4752). One restriction of Tampermonkey I forgot to mention is that you cannot close a tab using `window.close()` if that is the only one left, that is, you cannot shut down Chrome completely. – zanetu Aug 27 '15 at 22:17
  • You're right, @zanetu, your script works for me too on TM 3.11 and Chrome 43.0.2357.124 m. Updated the answer. – Brock Adams Aug 27 '15 at 22:41
  • This doesn't appear to be working for me in Tampermonkey in Chrome any longer. – Zach Saucier Feb 16 '19 at 15:10
  • @ZachSaucier, what exactly doesn't work? (Zanetu's hack? Something else? Under what exact conditions?) You may need to open a new question and provide a [mcve]. – Brock Adams Feb 16 '19 at 17:43
  • @BrockAdams The example TamperMonkey script – Zach Saucier Feb 16 '19 at 18:21
33

Chrome Fixed the security issues on version 36.0.1985.125

Chrome 36.0.1985.125 WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 Release note

From my observation, this update fixed the issue on using window.close() to close the popup window. You will see this in the console when it fail, "Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by it.". That means The hacky workarounds (Brock Adams's answer) may not work in the latest release.

So, in the previous Chrome released builds, the below code block may worked but not with this update.

window.open('', '_self', '');
window.close();

For this update, you have to update your code accordingly to close the popup window. One of the solution is to grab the popup window id and use

chrome.windows.remove(integer windowId, function callback)

method to remove it. Chrome extension windows API can be found at chrome.windows.

Actually my chrome extension MarkView was facing this issue and I had to update my code to make it work for this Chrome Update. By the way, MarkView is tool to read and write Awesome Markdown Files, it provides features including Content Outline, Sortable Tables and code block syntax highlight with line number.

I also created this post, any comments are welcome.

swcool
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    The correct hack is `open(location, '_self').close();` -- note the use of the return value from `open()`. This still works on Chrome `36.0.1985.125 m` – Brock Adams Jul 21 '14 at 00:26
  • In my case, I just test again with `open(location, '_self').close();`, I got "Unauthorized" error on this. This error is different with 'window.close()`(warning on this"Scripts may close only the windows that were opened by it."). It looked like `open(location, '_self').close();` moved forward a little bit, but it can't complete in my case. Thanks @brock-adams for the comment. – swcool Jul 21 '14 at 15:42
  • I have typescript and when i put `chrome.windows.remove` it says could not find symbol chrome. how can i resolve this? do i need to add some sort of reference? – DevT Jul 22 '14 at 12:03
  • @devt chrome.windows.remove is Chrome extension API, your javascript should be recognized by your chrome extension program. You can try it inside background.js, in your chrome extension manifest.json you need to have: "background": { "scripts": ["background.js"], ... }, – swcool Jul 22 '14 at 19:28
  • I had removed [MarkView](https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/markview/iaddkimmopgchbbnmfmdcophmlnghkim) login function for users to access freely. So the example I mentioned in above is not available now. – swcool Dec 03 '16 at 15:05
23

In tampermonkey now you can use

// @grant        window.close

And then just simply call

window.close();
balping
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Requrements for this to work:

You have to open the window/tab from a window launcher to get a javascript handle to have it work, as it does not always work on a tab that was not opened via a window-launcher script. This test page shows you how:

http://browserstrangeness.bitbucket.io/window_close_tester.htm

If you don't see it working from my launcher, posting your browser, your device and versions are necessary. Browsers of different versions act differently on different devices. (Such as Firefox and Chrome on iPads which are NOT what they say they are. They are Safari with a different skin!)

So it is important to say for example 'I am using Safari 10.14 on an iPad using iOs 14.5' so I can research it for you and post results to help other users. Thanks in advance for doing that. If you use the launcher and it works on my example for you, then it works.

I am using the method posted by Brock Adams and it even works in Firefox, if it's user initiated by being launched by button or link from another window.

open(location, '_self').close();

I am calling it from a button press so it is user initiated, and it is still working fine using Chrome 90, Internet Explorer 11, Edge, Safari 7-10 and ALSO Firefox 35 & 88. I tested using version 8.1 & 10 of Windows and Mac OS X 10.6, 10.9 & 10.10 & 10.14 if that is different.


Self-Closing Window Code (on the page that closes itself)

The complete code to be used on the user-opened window that can close itself:

window_to_close.htm

JavaScript:

function quitBox(cmd)
{   
    if (cmd=='quit')
    {
        open(location, '_self').close();
    }   
    return false;   
}

HTML:

<input type="button" name="Quit" id="Quit" value="Quit" onclick="return quitBox('quit');" />

Here is that test page again with a working example: (Now tested in Chrome 90.0 and Firefox 88.0 -- both on Windows 10 and Mac 10.14 Mojave)

http://browserstrangeness.bitbucket.io/window_close_tester.htm


Window Opener Code (on a page that opens the above page)

To make this work, security-imposed cross browser compatibility requires that the window that is to be closed must have already been opened by the user clicking a button within the same site domain.

For example, the window that uses the method above to close itself, can be opened from a page using this code (code provided from my example page linked above):

window_close_tester.htm

JavaScript:

function open_a_window() 
{
    window.open("window_to_close.htm"); 

    return false;
}

HTML:

<input type="button" onclick="return open_a_window();" value="Open New Window/Tab" />
Jeff Clayton
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  • Forgot about the user initiated exceptions; good catch. I think most userscripters want fully automatic operation though. They already have a handy, user initiated close mechanism -- that little X in the upper right. (^_^) – Brock Adams May 16 '14 at 00:51
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    Somehow, this doesn't work for me. Neither on firefox 30 nor on Chrome 37. All it does is make the page become blank (really weird behavior). My code is ``. Am I doing something obviously wrong? It seems to me that this is also user initiated. Note that I get the same result if I use a ` – LordOfThePigs Aug 28 '14 at 22:47
  • Added a test page above in the answer for you. – Jeff Clayton Aug 28 '14 at 23:12
  • @YumYumYum thanks for the post, bitbucket.org changed the link to bitbucket.io recently - fixed in the answer now – Jeff Clayton Apr 16 '17 at 02:58
  • It works for me (having a button on the page to close the window). What didn't work was : ```window.open('', '_self', ''); window.close();``` but it worked with ```open(location, '_self').close();``` – krystonen Jul 03 '19 at 12:05
  • @krystonen - Glad you tried this one, while the option the op had issues with may have worked in the past, security updates have made these workarounds a necessity. – Jeff Clayton Jul 07 '19 at 14:27
  • I get same as @LordOfThePigs - the page is cleared out but the tab remains open. – Larry Martell Apr 28 '21 at 19:32
  • @LarryMartell To help you or anyone else reading this, there are 2 questions needing answers about your experience -- 1) what browser are you using on what device? 2) did you go to the opener test page or did you just try it without using a page to launch the window? (it cannot always close a window that was not opened with the script as javascript needs to open it to get a handle before attempting to close the new window.) – Jeff Clayton May 01 '21 at 15:09
13

Many people are still trying to find a way to close the Chrome browser using javascript. The following method only works when you use Chrome as APP launcher - kiosk for example!

I have tested the following:

I'm using the following extension: Close Kiosk

I'm following the usage instructions and it seems to work just fine (make sure you clear the cache while doing the tests). The javascript I use is (attached to click event):

window.location.href = '/closekiosk';

I hope that helps somebody, as it's the only working solution I have found.

Note: It seems the extension runs in background and adds a Chrome tray icon. It has the following option checked: "Let Chrome run in background" (or similar text). You may need to play with it, until it work for you. I unchecked it and now it works just fine!

Minister
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Despite thinking it is "patently false", what you say "seems to be a belief" is actually correct. The Mozilla documentation for window.close says

This method is only allowed to be called for windows that were opened by a script using the window.open method. If the window was not opened by a script, the following error appears in the JavaScript Console: Scripts may not close windows that were not opened by script

You say that it is "supposed to still do it" but I don't think you'll find any reference which supports that, maybe you've misremembered something?

Gareth
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12

I found a new way that works for me perfetly

var win = window.open("about:blank", "_self");
win.close();
शेखर
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Gerardo Abdo
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6

The below code worked for me -

window.open('location', '_self', '');
window.close();

Tested on Chrome 43.0.2357.81

Stephan
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DfrDkn
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3

If you can't close windows that aren't opened by the script, then you can destroy your page using this code:

 document.getElementsByTagName ('html') [0] .remove ();
Ibnul Husainan
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2

I wanted to share my "solution" with this issue. It seems like most of us are trying to close a browser window in a standard browser session, where a user is visiting some website or another, after they've visited other websites, and before they'll visit some more.

However, my situation is that I am building a web app for a device that will essentially be the only thing the device does. You boot it up, it launches Chrome and navigates to our app. It's not even connected to the internet, any servers it talks to are on our local Docker containers. The user needs a way to close the app (aka close Chrome) so they can access the terminal to perform system updates.

So it boots up, launches Chrome in kiosk mode, at the correct address already. This happens to easily satisfy the second option in the spec:

A browsing context is script-closable if it is an auxiliary browsing context that was created by a script (as opposed to by an action of the user), or if it is a top-level browsing context whose session history contains only one Document.

So simply calling window.close() from my kiosk app just works!

Jonathan Tuzman
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  • Thank you for sharing this bit of knowledge about kiosk mode. I can confirm this it works! And this is exactly what I actually want. – Envek Nov 16 '20 at 17:58
1

This might be old, but let's answer it.

I use top.close() to close a tab. window.close() or other open...close didn't work for me.

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    This also suffers from the `"Scripts may not close windows that were not opened by script."` problem mentioned in other answers. – kad81 Sep 15 '14 at 06:49
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    please give solution on your answer. please don't discuss problem only on your answer. – Bimal Das Aug 04 '17 at 05:05
1

In my case, the page needed to close, but may have been opened by a link and thus window.close would fail.

The solution I chose is to issue the window.close, followed by a window.setTimeout that redirects to a different page.

That way, if window.close succeeds, execution on that page stops, but if it fails, in a second, it will redirect to a different page.

window.close();
window.setTimeout(function(){location.href = '/some-page.php';},1000);
user2182349
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-1

You can also try to use my code below. This will also help you to redirect your parent window:

Parent:

<script language="javascript">

function open_a_window() 
{
    var w = 200;
        var h = 200;
        var left = Number((screen.width/2)-(w/2));
        var tops = Number((screen.height/2)-(h/2));

        window.open("window_to_close.html", '', 'toolbar=no, location=no, directories=no, status=no, menubar=no, scrollbars=no, resizable=no, copyhistory=no, width='+w+', height='+h+', top='+tops+', left='+left);

   return false;
}

// opener:
window.onmessage = function (e) {
  if (e.data === 'location') {
    window.location.replace('https://www.google.com');
  }
};

</script>

<input type="button" onclick="return open_a_window();" value="Open New Window/Tab" />

Popup:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body onload="quitBox('quit');">

<h1>The window closer:</h1>

<input type="button" onclick="return quitBox('quit');" value="Close This Window/Tab" /> 


<script language="javascript">

function quitBox(cmd) 
{      
    if (cmd=='quit')    
    {   
       window.opener.postMessage('location', '*');
       window.open(location, '_self').close();    
    }     
    return false;   
}

</script>

</body>
</html>
Harshal Lonare
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-2

Only if you open a new window using window.open() will the new window be able to close using code as I have mentioned above. This works perfectly for me :) Note : Never use href to open the page in a new tab. Window.close() does not work with "href" . Use window.open() instead.

DfrDkn
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For TamperMonkey:

@grant window.close 

Ref: https://www.tampermonkey.net/documentation.php#_grant

Shree
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simon tan
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  • Whilst this may theoretically answer the question, [it would be preferable](//meta.stackexchange.com/q/8259) to include the essential parts of the answer here, and provide the link for reference. – Anton Menshov Apr 06 '20 at 03:17
-6

Try something like this onclick="return self.close()"

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