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I made an HTML page that has an <input> tag with type="text". When I click on it using Safari on iPhone, the page becomes larger (auto zoom). Does anybody know how to disable this?

Vega
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Eduardo Montenegro
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    For all **Twitter Bootstrap** users landing here: see also [this Github issue](https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/issues/2159). – Jeroen Mar 08 '15 at 22:15
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    I think @daxmacrog answer exactly answers what you want, are you willing to accept it so it can rise to the top and save lots of rework from people reading through all this? 2018 Answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/46254706/172651 – Evolve Nov 14 '18 at 05:17
  • @Evolve the answer you spoke about breaks android pinch and zoom functionality. daxmacrog answer is flawed. – M H Jun 12 '19 at 19:40
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    I swear, Apple creates these anti-features just to mess with our heads. – Andrew Koster Aug 24 '19 at 23:57
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    @AndrewKoster, I agree with you even now in 2020. – Ashok Feb 13 '20 at 11:01
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    August 2020, and one more time, I got back here, hoping for a miracle in the answers. See your next year. I am going to eat an apple. – Marc Aug 06 '20 at 09:31
  • iOS is next IE. – step Nov 26 '20 at 08:26

36 Answers36

548

The browser will zoom if the font-size is less than 16px and the default font-size for form elements is 11px (at least in Chrome and Safari).

Additionally, the select element needs to have the focus pseudo-class attached.

input[type="color"],
input[type="date"],
input[type="datetime"],
input[type="datetime-local"],
input[type="email"],
input[type="month"],
input[type="number"],
input[type="password"],
input[type="search"],
input[type="tel"],
input[type="text"],
input[type="time"],
input[type="url"],
input[type="week"],
select:focus,
textarea {
  font-size: 16px;
}

It's not necessary to use all the above, you can just style the elements you need, eg: just text, number, and textarea:

input[type='text'],
input[type='number'],
textarea {
  font-size: 16px;
}

Alternate solution to have the input elements inherit from a parent style:

body {
  font-size: 16px;
}
input[type="text"] {
  font-size: inherit;
}
Ivar
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srikanth
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    I found this works for those fields specified, but alas not for select fields... any ideas how to achieve similar for these? – iamkeir Apr 25 '12 at 13:44
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    @iamkeir For select dropdowns the issue is solved in [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6483425/prevent-iphone-from-zooming-in-on-select-in-web-app] – Mohamed Hussain Apr 09 '13 at 06:57
  • Wonderful! Never imagine this issue is related to font size. – crab Apr 24 '13 at 13:48
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    Just to get everything covered: `select, textarea, input[type="text"], input[type="password"], input[type="datetime"], input[type="datetime-local"], input[type="date"], input[type="month"], input[type="time"], input[type="week"], input[type="number"], input[type="email"], input[type="url"], input[type="search"], input[type="tel"], input[type="color"] { font-size: 16px; }` – Nic Barbier Jul 05 '13 at 15:10
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    Note: The 16px limit will only work if the website is not zoomed (out) by default. If the page (body) is broader than 320 pixels and width=device-width and the page is shown on iPhone in portrait mode, than this will not work. – BurninLeo Jul 14 '13 at 11:51
  • Why isn't this selected as the best answer? It worked excellent on my iPod touch. This was exactly what I needed. Thanks a lot! – GalloPinto Jul 30 '13 at 15:11
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    I'm on iOS 7 and using Nic Barbier's style – which includes `select` – Safari still zooms onto select. Any idea? – Nick Dec 05 '13 at 09:55
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    @Nic You need to use `select:focus`. Was having the same issue too. – DGibbs Jun 09 '14 at 14:25
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    I had to use add `textarea:focus` (might be bootstrap related). – Marwelln Nov 10 '14 at 14:01
  • Has anyone succeeded in making this work on an iPhone 6? – Mike Dec 09 '14 at 21:24
  • don't use a specific px value. Use rem or em instead as the better option: `select, textarea, input[type="text"], input[type="password"], input[type="datetime"], input[type="datetime-local"], input[type="date"], input[type="month"], input[type="time"], input[type="week"], input[type="number"], input[type="email"], input[type="url"], input[type="search"], input[type="tel"], input[type="color"] { font-size: 16px; font-size: 1rem; }` though I can't seem to find a good reason why to still target ie7/8 – Sam Vloeberghs Dec 12 '14 at 13:45
  • http://jonassebastianohlsson.com/blog/2013/11/25/how-to-stop-zoom-in-on-input-focus-on-mobile-devices/ – Fred K May 09 '15 at 09:31
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    I don't understand, how is this a fix? What if I want a smaller/larger font size? – bryan Aug 03 '15 at 23:46
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    proper way is to change meta tag to: – Milos Matic Dec 04 '15 at 09:57
  • This did not work per say. It was close though. I had to amp up the font size until it stopped zooming in. So it worked, but at the same time, don't automatically think that 16px is the size you want. Tinker with it. – rardoz Mar 22 '16 at 19:26
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    @MilosMatic In most cases probably not a good solution, as it completely prevents the user from scaling the page. Potentially even more annoying for your visitors. – BadHorsie Jul 08 '16 at 14:32
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    "Ensure that the browser pinch zoom is not blocked by the page's viewport meta element so that it can be used to zoom the page to 200%. Restrictive values for user-scalable and maximum-scale attributes of this meta element should be avoided." https://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-accessibility-mapping/#zoom-magnification – danielnixon Oct 16 '16 at 21:23
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    I had to use select without the focus pseudo-selector to get it to work – Alex May 23 '17 at 12:01
  • another way, but this blocks the 2 finger pinch zoom in functionality on android. on iPhone the pinch zoom works fine – techloris_109 Dec 11 '17 at 10:43
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    For people struggling with text inputs that don't have `type="text"` set you can use: `input:not([type]), input[type="text"] { font-size: 16px; }` – James Hulse Dec 19 '17 at 12:23
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    This answer might have worked 7 years ago, but now it is not correct. I have a TEXTAREA with font size 40px, and Safari is auto-zooming it on my iphone 6. The correct answer is @daxmacrog – John Henckel Nov 07 '18 at 16:04
  • Just keep font-size: initial; for forms elements. – Usman Arshad Nov 14 '18 at 14:46
  • this doesnt work on iOS Safari or Chome, even if i set the `font-size` of `input` elements to `16px` explicitly... – oldboy Jul 26 '19 at 20:59
531

You can prevent Safari from automatically zooming in on text fields during user input without disabling the user’s ability to pinch zoom. Just add maximum-scale=1 but leave out the user-scale attribute suggested in other answers.

It is a worthwhile option if you have a form in a layer that “floats” around if zoomed, which can cause important UI elements to move off screen.

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1">

daxmacrog
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  • Going to try this. I don't always want 16px size. Sometimes 15 looks good and I still need user to be able to zoom. – user1842315 Oct 25 '17 at 18:16
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    This works for me on IPhone 6S, IOS 11.2. No zoom on the form field, but can still pinch zoom the page. – tremby Dec 22 '17 at 03:12
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    This is the 2018+ solution. Upvote this like your life depends on it. – Henrik Petterson Feb 02 '18 at 12:35
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    You can use `var iOS = navigator.platform && /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform);` to check whether the browser is on iOS – Finesse Jun 22 '18 at 03:02
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    This will break android devices zooming ability – fen1ksss Aug 14 '18 at 14:52
  • @fen1ksss That is good to note, which is why Finesse suggested browser sniffing, but the OP did ask about iOS/Safari specifically. – daxmacrog Aug 14 '18 at 16:05
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    @daxmacrog, you are right, but the OP did not mention whether he wants to break androids by allowing needed behaviour. This is where personally I took incorrect option. Of course, it's better to specify. – fen1ksss Aug 15 '18 at 11:27
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    @HenrikPetterson This does more than just disabling the auto-zoom as specified by OP, it also disables pinch zoom. So I don't think it's the 2018+ solution. – André Werlang Sep 17 '18 at 23:05
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    @AndréWerlang That is not accurate. As stated clearly in the answer, this solution does not disable pinch zoom in Safari (or Firefox), which is what the OP asked about. But as pointed out in previous comments, it does disable user zoom on Android devices and in Chrome on iOS. – daxmacrog Sep 18 '18 at 00:07
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    So there's no meta solution for Chrome on iOS. On all mobile iOS browsers it will zoom in automatically, and on mobile Safari you can disable this with maximum-scale=1, but on Chrome for iOS this disables all zooming (like on android) as google thinks it's following standards better, but it's actually worse than Safari because it doesn't let you disable automatic zoom separately from user zoom. – Curtis Nov 19 '18 at 22:21
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    Most accessibility services will also complain about zoom being disabled in any browser – jbhelfrich Feb 11 '19 at 15:56
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    There's a lot of confusion about whether `maximum-scale=1` annoyingly disables user pinch zoom. The behavior **changed with iOS 10** when Apple rightly decided to ignore disabling user pinch zoom. The good news is that the setting still works to prevent automatic zoom on focus. – Dem Pilafian Oct 27 '19 at 08:54
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    I think I tried every option and this was the only one that worked to prevent auto-zooming and still allowed user zoom. I can still zoom on android devices as well so maybe things have changed. This seems to be the best solution. – Syntax Error Jan 18 '20 at 22:00
  • As @jbhelfrich pointed out, disabling zoom is an accessibility issue as many users rely on that to see clearly, especially when the font size is less than 16px as it is in this scenario. Also, just because OP asked for a solution for a problem that was specifically affecting iOS Safari does not indicate that they only support that browser. Who only supports one browser? – stephen.hanson Jul 29 '20 at 15:05
  • Thank you @daxmacrog – Mustafa Tığ Oct 31 '20 at 12:02
236
@media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) { 
  select:focus,
  textarea:focus,
  input:focus {
    font-size: 16px;
    background: #eee;
  }
}

New: IOS will still zoom, unless you use 16px on the input without the focus.

@media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) { 
  select,
  textarea,
  input {
    font-size: 16px;
  }
}

I added a background since IOS adds no background on the select.

Christina
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    This is a simple, elegant solution that seems to work very well. I like the tip of adding a background to the focused element, as it helps to make the active field stand out from the rest. Thanks! – wicketyjarjar May 28 '13 at 08:40
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    Beautiful solution...simple and elegant. – Fer Jul 05 '13 at 09:10
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    This works not only for safari on iOS (iphone/ipad/ipod), but also Safari/OSX and Chrome (windows and Mac). So if you're trying to specifically target the iphone, this will not work. – Redtopia Oct 16 '13 at 23:13
  • I just want to say I have lots of different queries using zoom to make development go faster and depending on how much you zoom will determine how much font-size you need I believe – mike May 02 '14 at 23:55
  • If you don't have an absolute line-height set, or a height on your input element, then won't this cause the element to change size on focus? Why not just set the font styles without the `:focus` selector? – Ciaran Phillips Jul 08 '14 at 22:16
  • This did not work for me using Zurb Foundation. I had to omit the `:focus` modifier and add `!important` to the `font-size`. – Dex Jul 14 '14 at 04:22
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    @CiaranPhillips, I think the purpose of the `:focus` modifiers is to keep the fonts at the normal size when the fields are not selected. It's a great idea, but Safari on iOS 8 still auto-zooms for me unless I remove the `:focus` modifiers. – arlomedia Feb 10 '15 at 23:02
  • I have the same result with @arlomedia. On iOS 8 limiting to :focus selector will not work. – user985409 Mar 13 '15 at 12:49
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    Why is everyone saying 16px but no one cares to mention why exactly is it 16px? Why such an arbitrary number? Why do we have to set our form field text size to 16px and not .. say 1.8rem or 2.5em or such? Is this just a stupid bug from a proprietary OS? – Beebee Jul 14 '15 at 15:30
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    @Beebee 100% font size is 16px, that the default for most if not all browsers (desktop too). IOS uses it that as the default probably because it's a comfortable size for reading. Why it is set this way I haven't bothered to look up, don't care. – Christina Jul 14 '15 at 19:29
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    Use `@media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) and (max-device-width:1024px)` to limit the effect to iPhone, but do not modify websites when viewed in Chrome. – BurninLeo Nov 16 '15 at 20:17
  • Watch out: The most recent iOS does not work with the :focus - it will zoom unless the input has 16px without the :focus :( – BurninLeo Nov 16 '15 at 20:23
  • Updated the answer. For the last year or so, I set base font size 100% and since then, this has not been required. – Christina Nov 16 '15 at 20:49
  • oddly, if you add `width` attribute to the input CSS, some zoom is back. – tim Mar 15 '16 at 20:12
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    Instead of using a media query, you should use `@supports (-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch)`, as this css feature only exists on iOS – James Moran Jun 26 '18 at 10:32
  • In case you don't want the not focused select state to have 16px, use transform: scale() – axel freudiger Dec 13 '18 at 12:02
203

If your website is properly designed for a mobile device you could decide not allow scaling.

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, maximum-scale=1.0, user-scalable=0" />

This solves the problem that your mobile page or form is going to 'float' around.

alex
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Marcellino Bommezijn
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    Technically correct, but I disagree with the reasoning. Disabling user zooms on a properly designed site is generally still a bad idea. – Fer Feb 04 '13 at 17:59
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    "Properly designed" is very subjective. Consider a fixed, 50px header at the top of a site that is fully responsive and should work in all browsers. Zooming in iOS Safari breaks the header positioning and pretty much breaks the whole site. – Redtopia Oct 15 '13 at 20:20
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    Properly designed means that you have taken care of all html (text) and design elements in a way that it is readable on a mobile device (primarily phones). If this is properly done there is no need to allow scaling for a visitor and avoids all the unexpected behaviour when scaling/zooming. – Marcellino Bommezijn Dec 12 '13 at 08:40
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    Disabling user zoom capability is a terrible practice from a UX perspective and should really be avoided at all costs. Being able to zoom in freely is a basic accessibility feature, and a control that you should never take away from the user. – Gabriel Luethje Jan 21 '14 at 22:58
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    In native mobile apps you never get the chance to zoom and they work just fine, why would a webapp be any different? If you set the appropriate font-size and line-height with clear contrasts you should be ok. – jotav Sep 04 '14 at 13:59
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    It's only an opinion that disabling user scrolling matters. As long as your site works, is readable, etc then you are fine. Native moble apps do not allow you to zoom in and generally speaking most people do not need this feature as long as your app is well built. – skrilled Oct 02 '14 at 17:54
  • @skrilled A mobile app can be seen in devices that can range from 320x480 to 1140x2560 as smart phones go and from 600x1024 to 1600x2560 as tablets go (granted most of them report as smaller resolutions), so a webapp that looks good in small screens doesn't necessarily inherit its properties 1:1 in larger ones. – Ricardo Zea May 21 '15 at 16:44
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    Those using the 'it's fine in native apps' argument are overlooking the fact that well-made native apps adhere to OS-level accessibility settings such as text size. Older and badly sighted users can and do use extremely large OS-wide font sizes because they *need* to. Web apps often don't or can't adhere to this setting, therefore allowing the web-browser's built-in accessibility functionality such as zooming is vital. Whatever you think is perfectly readable, believe me, there are people who won't find it clear enough. Do *not* take this option away from users if you value usability. – Ryan Williams Jun 29 '15 at 13:13
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    @jotav https://xkcd.com/1174/ Not being able to zoom is one of the many reasons I avoid mobile apps. – bjb568 Aug 25 '15 at 19:39
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    "Ensure that the browser pinch zoom is not blocked by the page's viewport meta element so that it can be used to zoom the page to 200%. Restrictive values for user-scalable and maximum-scale attributes of this meta element should be avoided." https://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-accessibility-mapping/#zoom-magnification – danielnixon Oct 16 '16 at 21:24
  • This is really helpful, as although the 16px works, i needed a way smaller font, thanks – TeT Psy Dec 20 '16 at 15:22
  • `maximum-scale=1.0` is a very bad idea! – Ahmad Awais Jun 07 '17 at 20:53
  • As suggested in @daxmacrog's answer below, this will work even without `user-scalable=0`. The auto-zoom then won't take place, but the user can still zoom at will. – tremby Dec 22 '17 at 03:14
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    With this approach you can still pinch zoom the screen, but at least it stops auto-zooming on a field focus. – Reuel Ribeiro Feb 21 '18 at 13:47
  • Safari ignores the prohibitive zoom meta viewport directives nowadays. It's official. https://github.com/w3c/html/issues/602 – catamphetamine Apr 27 '18 at 18:59
  • This does not cover every situation: When the font is larger than 16 pixels, Safari may zoom out when focusing an input. In my case I just needed put `minimum-scale=1`, which also preserves the user's ability to custom zoom. – Micros Aug 28 '19 at 07:46
  • This will be flagged up by Google Lighthouse as an accessibility issue. Use at your own peril. – Micheal J. Roberts Aug 07 '20 at 10:08
78

In summary the answer is: set the font size of the form elements to at least 16px

Mladen Janjetovic
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Nik
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  • Yes, this is definetly the **best practice** to avoid zooming on mobile devices. No js, no hacks, no workarounds at all. But even with 16px I noticed a very little zoom in my pages so I tried 17px, 18px... to see what happens. – ed1nh0 Mar 05 '13 at 17:22
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    It is best practice to declare 100% on body, button, input, textarea and select elements. This allows the user to set a default that is not the 16px shipped with browsers. Someone who has trouble reading on screen might set their default to 18px or 20px. You don't want to override their choice by forcing 16px on them. When it comes to iOS, though, they made a decision to scale up any value that their HIG says is too small. Unfortunately it looks like it does not interpret the 100% value, so we are stuck adding in the default to appease it. – J. Hogue Oct 18 '16 at 18:43
  • RE iOS Safari, as of this comment it appears Safari correctly interprets the `font-size: 100%` value and grabs the 16px necessary. – Nathan Lafferty Oct 26 '18 at 19:28
54

Proper way to fix this issue is to change meta viewport to:

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1, user-scalable=0"/>

Important: do not set minimum-scale! This keeps the page manually zoomable.

fabb
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Milos Matic
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    This is not necessarily the "proper" way to prevent this behaviour. Mobile Safari zooms in if the text is deemed too small to read. Switching off zooming all together is heavy handed and prevents users from being able to interact with your page in a way that they may expect. – AlecRust Jan 20 '16 at 22:41
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    Apparently in iOS10 Apple changed the maximum-scale property to not be respected anymore, allowing all sites to zoom in regardless of its setting. – Wolfr Jun 14 '16 at 20:09
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    This works for iOS10 20/September/2016 version... at least works on my app... Thanks!!! Before I was using But I switched it to the line on the response and it worked... – eljamz Sep 22 '16 at 15:20
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    "Ensure that the browser pinch zoom is not blocked by the page's viewport meta element so that it can be used to zoom the page to 200%. Restrictive values for user-scalable and maximum-scale attributes of this meta element should be avoided." https://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-accessibility-mapping/#zoom-magnification – danielnixon Oct 16 '16 at 21:24
  • I've seen comments how some of these meta tags don't work on iOS 10 and I know that the above works on Chrome for the iOS at least. :) Thanks! – cbloss793 Jan 06 '17 at 19:15
  • this worked in ios but in android the pich zoom is not working – Pein Aug 30 '18 at 15:24
  • To disable zoom when the user tap inside a input field... "user-scalable=0" solve my problem. – diegodsp Jan 04 '21 at 10:57
39
input[type='text'],textarea {font-size:1em;}
stormsweeper
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    Note that setting user-scalable to no will disable all zooming, which is probably a bad idea. – stormsweeper Sep 23 '10 at 22:14
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    This only works if your body font size is the default (un-specified, or `1em`, or `100%`). If you set a custom font size, you can set the `font-size` in your snippet to `16px` to avoid auto-zooming. – Alan H. Jun 01 '11 at 22:08
  • I know this question was directed at iPhone but this is more compatible across platforms and into the future of more platforms/devices, I tried the 16px approach but on an Android tablet only reduced the auto zooming effect. Setting to '1em' as specified in the post solved the issue. – toddles_fp Sep 15 '13 at 12:20
  • I had a custom font-size (15px), and setting the font-size to 1rem (not em) worked. – Felipe Castro Nov 06 '16 at 16:21
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    Neither `1em` nor `1rem` is a proper solution because both can be less than `16px` and Safari requires at least `16px` to not zoom. – Finesse Apr 30 '19 at 02:33
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    i used viewport solution but it not worked, 16px solution is works fine, but 16px is too big for inputbox of my site, is there have any 3rd solution – Suneth Kalhara May 02 '19 at 17:18
  • this doesnt work on iOS Safari or Chome, even if i set the `font-size` of `input` elements to `16px` explicitly... – oldboy Jul 26 '19 at 20:59
28

As many other answers have already pointed out, this can be achieved by adding maximum-scale to the meta viewport tag. However, this has the negative consequence of disabling user zoom on Android devices. (It does not disable user zoom on iOS devices since v10.)

We can use JavaScript to dynamically add maximum-scale to the meta viewport when the device is iOS. This achieves the best of both worlds: we allow the user to zoom and prevent iOS from zooming into text fields on focus.

| maximum-scale             | iOS: can zoom | iOS: no text field zoom | Android: can zoom |
| ------------------------- | ------------- | ----------------------- | ----------------- |
| yes                       | yes           | yes                     | no                |
| no                        | yes           | no                      | yes               |
| yes on iOS, no on Android | yes           | yes                     | yes               |

Code:

const addMaximumScaleToMetaViewport = () => {
  const el = document.querySelector('meta[name=viewport]');

  if (el !== null) {
    let content = el.getAttribute('content');
    let re = /maximum\-scale=[0-9\.]+/g;

    if (re.test(content)) {
        content = content.replace(re, 'maximum-scale=1.0');
    } else {
        content = [content, 'maximum-scale=1.0'].join(', ')
    }

    el.setAttribute('content', content);
  }
};

const disableIosTextFieldZoom = addMaximumScaleToMetaViewport;

// https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9038625/detect-if-device-is-ios/9039885#9039885
const checkIsIOS = () =>
  /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.userAgent) && !window.MSStream;

if (checkIsIOS()) {
  disableIosTextFieldZoom();
}
stamat
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Oliver Joseph Ash
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16

There's no clean way I could find, but here's a hack...

1) I noticed that the mouseover event happens prior to the zoom, but the zoom happens before mousedown or focus events.

2) You can dynamically change the META viewport tag using javascript (see Enable/disable zoom on iPhone safari with Javascript?)

So, try this (shown in jquery for compactness):

$("input[type=text], textarea").mouseover(zoomDisable).mousedown(zoomEnable);
function zoomDisable(){
  $('head meta[name=viewport]').remove();
  $('head').prepend('<meta name="viewport" content="user-scalable=0" />');
}
function zoomEnable(){
  $('head meta[name=viewport]').remove();
  $('head').prepend('<meta name="viewport" content="user-scalable=1" />');
}

This is definitely a hack... there may be situations where mouseover/down don't always catch entries/exits, but it worked well in my tests and is a solid start.

Community
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dlo
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    Not sure when Safari behavior might have changed, but now (iOS6.0.1) mousedown is happening prior to the autozoom. Thus in my prior solution, zooming is getting re-enabled too soon. I haven't come up with an adequate fix, since all events I tried now happen before zoom. You could re-enable zoom upon a keydown or blur, but there are some scenarios that this might miss (such as if user wants to manually zoom before they start typing anything). – dlo Feb 01 '13 at 22:15
14

I recently (today :D) had to integrate this behavior. In order to not impact the original design fields, including combo, I opted to apply the transformation at the focus of the field:

input[type="text"]:focus, input[type="password"]:focus,
textarea:focus, select:focus {
  font-size: 16px;
}
piouPiouM
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  • FYI, This worked well on my iphone 5 with iOS 6, but on an iphone 4 with iOS 5 in portrait mode, the focus styling was applied after the zoom occurred. Maybe something subtle going on, I didn't investigate further. – Vish Apr 13 '13 at 03:20
  • I just want to say I have lots of different queries using zoom to make development go faster and depending on how much you zoom will determine how much font-size you need I believe – mike May 02 '14 at 23:59
  • :focus did not work for me iOS 10.2 iPhone 6, but input[type="text"]:hover worked well. – Amirhossein Rzd Feb 19 '17 at 20:54
13

Add user-scalable=0 to viewport meta as following

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, user-scalable=0">

Worked for me :)

Tuyen Cao
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    "Ensure that the browser pinch zoom is not blocked by the page's viewport meta element so that it can be used to zoom the page to 200%. Restrictive values for user-scalable and maximum-scale attributes of this meta element should be avoided." https://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-accessibility-mapping/#zoom-magnification – danielnixon Oct 16 '16 at 21:24
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    This breaks the rules of accessibility defined by W3. – Joshua Russell Dec 12 '16 at 05:57
  • worked for me, also this is the best solution for me as I want the freedom to change input font sizes below 16px and don't want a JS hack – Blue Bot Oct 21 '18 at 09:08
12

Instead of simply setting the font size to 16px, you can:

  1. Style the input field so that it is larger than its intended size, allowing the logical font size to be set to 16px.
  2. Use the scale() CSS transform and negative margins to shrink the input field down to the correct size.

For example, suppose your input field is originally styled with:

input[type="text"] {
    border-radius: 5px;
    font-size: 12px;
    line-height: 20px;
    padding: 5px;
    width: 100%;
}

If you enlarge the field by increasing all dimensions by 16 / 12 = 133.33%, then reduce using scale() by 12 / 16 = 75%, the input field will have the correct visual size (and font size), and there will be no zoom on focus.

As scale() only affects the visual size, you will also need to add negative margins to reduce the field's logical size.

With this CSS:

input[type="text"] {
    /* enlarge by 16/12 = 133.33% */
    border-radius: 6.666666667px;
    font-size: 16px;
    line-height: 26.666666667px;
    padding: 6.666666667px;
    width: 133.333333333%;

    /* scale down by 12/16 = 75% */
    transform: scale(0.75);
    transform-origin: left top;

    /* remove extra white space */
    margin-bottom: -10px;
    margin-right: -33.333333333%;
}

the input field will have a logical font size of 16px while appearing to have 12px text.

I have a blog post where I go into slightly more detail, and have this example as viewable HTML:
No input zoom in Safari on iPhone, the pixel perfect way

Jeffery To
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12

Inspired by @jirikuchta 's answer, I solved this problem by adding this bit of CSS:

#myTextArea:active {
  font-size: 16px; /* `16px` is safer I assume, although `1rem` works too */
}

No JS, and I don't notice any flash or anything.

It's worth noting that a viewport with maximum-scale=1 also works, but not when the page is loaded as an iframe, or if you have some other script modifying the viewport, etc.

Meligy
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8

Javascript hack which is working on iOS 7. This is based on @dlo 's answer but mouseover and mouseout events are replaced by touchstart and touchend events. Basicly this script add a half second timeout before the zoom would enabled again to prevent zooming.

$("input[type=text], textarea").on({ 'touchstart' : function() {
    zoomDisable();
}});
$("input[type=text], textarea").on({ 'touchend' : function() {
    setTimeout(zoomEnable, 500);
}});

function zoomDisable(){
  $('head meta[name=viewport]').remove();
  $('head').prepend('<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, user-scalable=0" />');
}
function zoomEnable(){
  $('head meta[name=viewport]').remove();
  $('head').prepend('<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, user-scalable=1" />');
} 
Ilkka R.
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  • This worked best for me. But, I changed the touchstart/touchend events to one 'focus' event with both zoomDisable and zoomEnable. – Justin Cloud Nov 11 '13 at 19:52
  • Adding the delay does seem to work pretty well on newer versions of iOS, but it's interesting that it doesn't work very well when set to 250ms. That hints that under some circumstances, 500ms might not work either, but if it works most of the time I guess it's better than not working at all. Good thinking. – dlo Jan 26 '15 at 03:44
8

I used Christina's solution above, but with a small modification for bootstrap and another rule to apply to desktop computers. Bootstrap's default font-size is 14px which causes the zoom. The following changes it to 16px for "form controls" in Bootstrap, preventing the zoom.

@media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) {
  .form-control {
    font-size: 16px;
  }
}

And back to 14px for non-mobile browsers.

@media (min-width: 768px) {
  .form-control {
    font-size: 14px;
  }
}

I tried using .form-control:focus, which left it at 14px except on focus which changed it to 16px and it did not fix the zoom problem with iOS8. At least on my iPhone using iOS8, the font-size has to be 16px before focus for the iPhone to not zoom the page.

Tanny O'Haley
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7

This worked for me:

input, textarea {
    font-size: initial;
}
  • Nicely simple, but is there any way to control what that "initial" size is? – 2540625 Sep 15 '14 at 00:35
  • I haven't tested it, but this should be a way to control the font size. (please let me know if this works and I'll update my answer) body { font-size: 20px; } input { font-size: inherit; } –  Sep 16 '14 at 01:19
7

Pseudo elements like :focus don't work as they used to. From iOS 11, a simple reset declaration can be added before your main styles (providing you don't override them with a smaller font size).

/* Prevent zoom */
select, input, textarea {
  font-size: 16px;
}

It's worth mentioning that for CSS libraries such as Tachyons.css then it's easy to accidentally override your font size.

For example class: f5 is equivalent to: fontSize: 1rem, which is fine if you have kept the body font scale at the default.

However: if you choose font size class: f6 this will be equivalent to fontSize: .875rem on a small display upwards. In that instance you'll need to be more specific about your reset declarations:


  /* Prevent zoom */
  select, input, textarea {
    font-size: 16px!important;
  }

@media screen and (min-width: 30em) {

/* not small */

}

Scott Phillips
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6

I did this, also with jQuery:

$('input[type=search]').on('focus', function(){
  // replace CSS font-size with 16px to disable auto zoom on iOS
  $(this).data('fontSize', $(this).css('font-size')).css('font-size', '16px');
}).on('blur', function(){
  // put back the CSS font-size
  $(this).css('font-size', $(this).data('fontSize'));
});

Of course, some other elements in the interface may have to be adapted if this 16px font-size breaks the design.

Nicolas Hoizey
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6

After a while of while trying I came up with this solution

// set font-size to 16px to prevent zoom 
input.addEventListener("mousedown", function (e) {
  e.target.style.fontSize = "16px";
});

// change font-size back to its initial value so the design will not break
input.addEventListener("focus", function (e) {
  e.target.style.fontSize = "";
});

On "mousedown" it sets font-size of input to 16px. This will prevent the zooming. On focus event it changes font-size back to initial value.

Unlike solutions posted before, this will let you set the font-size of the input to whatever you want.

jirikuchta
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  • This one actually works for me, especially since in newer iOS versions you can't use the viewport meta tag to disable zooming. – mparizeau Feb 05 '18 at 21:24
6

After reading almost every single line here and testing the various solutions, this is, thanks to all who shared their solutions, what I came up with, tested and working for me on iPhone 7 iOS 10.x :

@media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) {
    input[type="email"]:hover,
    input[type="number"]:hover,
    input[type="search"]:hover,
    input[type="text"]:hover,
    input[type="tel"]:hover,
    input[type="url"]:hover,
    input[type="password"]:hover,
    textarea:hover,
    select:hover{font-size: initial;}
}
@media (min-width: 768px) {
    input[type="email"]:hover,
    input[type="number"]:hover,
    input[type="search"]:hover,
    input[type="text"]:hover,
    input[type="tel"]:hover,
    input[type="url"]:hover,
    input[type="password"]:hover,
    textarea:hover,
    select:hover{font-size: inherit;}
}

It has some cons, though, noticeably a "jump" as result of the quick font size change occuring between the "hover"ed and "focus"ed states - and the redraw impact on performance

l3bel
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  • Thanks you for your feedback, @MikeBoutin . Can you please share your env (device/iOS version)? – l3bel Mar 18 '19 at 20:01
6

This worked for me on iOS Safari and Chrome. For the input selector could be set the class or id to enclose the current.

@supports (-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch) {
   input {
     font-size: 16px;
   }
}
lortschi
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4

I've had to "fix" the auto zoom into form controls issue for a Dutch University website (which used 15px in form controls). I came up with the following set of requirements:

  • user must still be able zoom in
  • font-size must remain the same
  • no flashes of temporary different styling
  • no jQuery requirement
  • must work on newest iOS and not hinder any other OS/device combination
  • if possible no magic timeouts, and if needed correctly clear timers

This is what I came up with so far:

/*
NOTE: This code overrides the viewport settings, an improvement would be
      to take the original value and only add or change the user-scalable value
*/

// optionally only activate for iOS (done because I havn't tested the effect under other OS/devices combinations such as Android)
var iOS = navigator.platform && /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform)
if (iOS)
  preventZoomOnFocus();


function preventZoomOnFocus()
{
  document.documentElement.addEventListener("touchstart", onTouchStart);
  document.documentElement.addEventListener("focusin", onFocusIn);
}


let dont_disable_for = ["checkbox", "radio", "file", "button", "image", "submit", "reset", "hidden"];
//let disable_for = ["text", "search", "password", "email", "tel", "url", "number", "date", "datetime-local", "month", "year", "color"];


function onTouchStart(evt)
{
  let tn = evt.target.tagName;

  // No need to do anything if the initial target isn't a known element
  // which will cause a zoom upon receiving focus
  if (    tn != "SELECT"
      &&  tn != "TEXTAREA"
      && (tn != "INPUT" || dont_disable_for.indexOf(evt.target.getAttribute("type")) > -1)
     )
    return;

  // disable zoom
  setViewport("width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, user-scalable=0");
}

// NOTE: for now assuming this focusIn is caused by user interaction
function onFocusIn(evt)
{
  // reenable zoom
  setViewport("width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, user-scalable=1");
}

// add or update the <meta name="viewport"> element
function setViewport(newvalue)
{
  let vpnode = document.documentElement.querySelector('head meta[name="viewport"]');
  if (vpnode)
    vpnode.setAttribute("content",newvalue);
  else
  {
    vpnode = document.createElement("meta");
    vpnode.setAttribute("name", "viewport");
    vpnode.setAttribute("content", newvalue);
  }
}

Some notes:

  • Note that so far I've only tested it on iOS 11.3.1, but will test it on a few other versions soon
  • Use of focusIn events means it requires at least iOS 5.1 (but I see sites we build working in iOS versions older as 9 as a cool bonus anyway)
  • Using event-delegation because a lot of sites I work on have pages which might dynamically create form controls
  • Setting the eventListeners to the html element (documentElement) so as not having to wait for body to become available (don't want to bother checking if document has ready/loaded state or needing to wait for the DOMContentLoaded event)
Spellcoder
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  • This doesn't work *entirely* perfect for me (input zoom is triggered for an that is dynamically added when the user pressed a button), but it worked for 85% of my cases, which is good enough at the moment. Just wanted to thank you for sharing your solution! – Sven Jan 25 '21 at 10:46
4

Even with these answers it took me three days to figure out what was going on and I may need the solution again in the future.

My situation was slightly different from the one described.

In mine, I had some contenteditable text in a div on the page. When the user clicked on a DIFFERENT div, a button of sorts, I automatically selected some text in the contenteditable div (a selection range that had previously been saved and cleared), ran a rich text execCommand on that selection, and cleared it again.

This enabled me to invisibly change text colors based on user interactions with color divs elsewhere on the page, while keeping the selection normally hidden to let them see the colors in the proper context.

Well, on iPad's Safari, clicking the color div resulted in the on-screen keyboard coming up, and nothing I did would prevent it.

I finally figured out how the iPad's doing this.

It listens for a touchstart and touchend sequence that triggers a selection of editable text.

When that combination happens, it shows the on-screen keyboard.

Actually, it does a dolly zoom where it expands the underlying page while zooming in on the editable text. It took me a day just to understand what I was seeing.

So the solution I used was to intercept both touchstart and touchend on those particular color divs. In both handlers I stop propagation and bubbling and return false. But in the touchend event I trigger the same behavior that click triggered.

So, before, Safari was triggering what I think was "touchstart", "mousedown", "touchend", "mouseup", "click", and because of my code, a text selection, in that order.

The new sequence because of the intercepts is simply the text selection. Everything else gets intercepted before Safari can process it and do its keyboard stuff. The touchstart and touchend intercepts prevent the mouse events from triggering as well, and in context this is totally fine.

I don't know an easier way to describe this but I think it's important to have it here because I found this thread within an hour of first encountering the issue.

I'm 98% sure the same fix will work with input boxes and anything else. Intercept the touch events and process them separately without letting them propagate or bubble, and consider doing any selections after a tiny timeout just to make sure Safari doesn't recognize the sequence as the keyboard trigger.

JBlitzen
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2

I see people here do some strange stuff with JavaScript or the viewport function and turning off all manually zooming on devices. That shouldn't be a solution in my opinion. Adding this CSS snippet will turn off the auto-zoom in iOS without changing your font-size to a fixed number like 16px.

By default, I use 93.8% (15px) font-size at input fields and by adding my CSS snippet this stays at 93.8%. No need to change to 16px or make it a fixed number.

input[type="text"]:focus,
textarea:focus {
    -webkit-text-size-adjust: 100%;
}
net.uk.sweet
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Jack Ottermans
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    This doesn’t work for me, tested with both latest iOS 6 and iOS 9.2.1. Here’s a minimal reproducible page: http://pastebin.com/bh5Zhe9h It still zooms on focus. Strange that this was posted in 2015 and upvoted yet doesn’t work in iOS 6. – Alexandre Dieulot Feb 15 '16 at 14:36
2

Setting a font-size (for input fields) equal to the body's font-size, seems to be what prevents the browser from zooming out or in. I'd suggest to use font-size: 1rem as a more elegant solution.

sindiploma
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2

By the way, if you use Bootstrap, you can just use this variant:

.form-control {
  font-size: 16px;
}
Bohdan Vorona
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2

I have looked through multiple answers.\

  1. The answer with setting maximum-scale=1 in meta tag works fine on iOS devices but disables the pinch to zoom functionality on Android devices.
  2. The one with setting font-size: 16px; onfocus is too hacky for me.

So I wrote a JS function to dynamically change meta tag.

var iOS = navigator.platform && /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform);
if (iOS)
    document.head.querySelector('meta[name="viewport"]').content = "width=device-width, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1";
else
    document.head.querySelector('meta[name="viewport"]').content = "width=device-width, initial-scale=1";
2

Amazing, there are dozens of answers here with javascript and viewports, and only one other mentions text-size-adjust which is what I believe is the best solution.

You can just set this to none.

Add the following CSS:

* {
 -webkit-text-size-adjust: none;
  text-size-adjust: none;
}
mike nelson
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  • this doesn't appear to work on ios, is there more to applying to solution successfully--meaning other requirements such as the meta viewport with appropriate values? – jimmont Oct 21 '20 at 08:07
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    Unfortunately this didn't work for me on safari iOS 14.4 – Elliot Plant Mar 09 '21 at 22:24
1

As the automatical zoom-in (with no zoom-out) is still annonying on iPhone, here's a JavaScript based on dlo's suggestion working with focus/blur.

Zooming is disabled as soon as a text input is fucused and re-anabled when the input is left.

Note: Some users may not apprechiate editing texts in a small text input! Therefore, I personally prefer to change the input's text size during editing (see code below).

<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
function attachEvent(element, evtId, handler) {
    if (element.addEventListener) {
        element.addEventListener(evtId, handler, false);
    } else if (element.attachEvent) {
        var ieEvtId = "on"+evtId;
        element.attachEvent(ieEvtId, handler);
    } else {
        var legEvtId = "on"+evtId;
        element[legEvtId] = handler;
    }
}
function onBeforeZoom(evt) {
    var viewportmeta = document.querySelector('meta[name="viewport"]');
    if (viewportmeta) {
        viewportmeta.content = "user-scalable=0";
    }
}
function onAfterZoom(evt) {
    var viewportmeta = document.querySelector('meta[name="viewport"]');
    if (viewportmeta) {
        viewportmeta.content = "width=device-width, user-scalable=1";
    }
}
function disableZoom() {
    // Search all relevant input elements and attach zoom-events
    var inputs = document.getElementsByTagName("input");
    for (var i=0; i<inputs.length; i++) {
        attachEvent(inputs[i], "focus", onBeforeZoom);
        attachEvent(inputs[i], "blur", onAfterZoom);
    }
}
if (navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i) || navigator.userAgent.match(/iPad/i)) {
    attachEvent(window, "load", disableZoom);
}
// -->
</script>

The following code will change an input's text size to 16 pixel (calculated, i.e., in the current zoom size) during the element has the focus. iPhone will therefore not automatically zoom-in.

Note: The zoom factor is calculated based on window.innerWidth and iPhone's display with of 320 pixels. This will only be valid for iPhone in portrait mode.

<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
function attachEvent(element, evtId, handler) {
    if (element.addEventListener) {
        element.addEventListener(evtId, handler, false);
    } else if (element.attachEvent) {
        var ieEvtId = "on"+evtId;
        element.attachEvent(ieEvtId, handler);
    } else {
        var legEvtId = "on"+evtId;
        element[legEvtId] = handler;
    }
}
function getSender(evt, local) {
    if (!evt) {
        evt = window.event;
    }
    var sender;
    if (evt.srcElement) {
        sender = evt.srcElement;
    } else {
        sender = local;
    }
    return sender;
}
function onBeforeZoom(evt) {
    var zoom = 320 / window.innerWidth;
    var element = getSender(evt);
    element.style.fontSize = Math.ceil(16 / zoom) + "px";
}
function onAfterZoom(evt) {
    var element = getSender(evt);
    element.style.fontSize = "";
}
function disableZoom() {
    // Search all relevant input elements and attach zoom-events
    var inputs = document.getElementsByTagName("input");
    for (var i=0; i<inputs.length; i++) {
        attachEvent(inputs[i], "focus", onBeforeZoom);
        attachEvent(inputs[i], "blur", onAfterZoom);
    }
}
if (navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone/i)) {
    attachEvent(window, "load", disableZoom);
}
// -->
</script>
BurninLeo
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1

It took me a while to find it but here's the best code that I found......http://nerd.vasilis.nl/prevent-ios-from-zooming-onfocus/

var $viewportMeta = $('meta[name="viewport"]');
$('input, select, textarea').bind('focus blur', function(event) {
$viewportMeta.attr('content', 'width=device-width,initial-scale=1,maximum-scale=' +        (event.type == 'blur' ? 10 : 1));
});
Stephen Walsh
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1

Based on Stephen Walsh's answer... This code works without changing the font size of inputs on focus (which looks lame), plus it still works with FastClick, which I suggest adding to all mobile sites to help bring the "snappy". Adjust your "viewport width" to suit your needs.

// disable autozoom when input is focused
    var $viewportMeta = $('head > meta[name="viewport"]');
    $('input, select, textarea').bind('touchend', function(event) {
        $viewportMeta.attr('content', 'width=640, user-scalable=0');
        setTimeout(function(){ $viewportMeta.attr('content', 'width=640, user-scalable=1'); }, 1)
    });
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rocky
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  • If the user had already zoomed in a bit before clicking the input control, would this solution cause the viewport to suddenly "unzoom"? – Bruno Torquato Apr 21 '15 at 22:13
  • Yes it does, but it doesn't look any more jarring than the previous "zoom" effect that happened every time the user clicked on an input. – Pete Nov 11 '15 at 18:29
1

A comment for the top answer about setting font-size to 16px asked how that is a solution, what if you want bigger/smaller font.

I don't know about you all, but using px for font sizes is not the best way to go, you should be using em.

I ran into this issue on my responsive site where my text field is larger than 16 pixels. I had my form container set to 2rem and my input field set to 1.4em. In my mobile queries I change html font-size depending on the viewport. Since the default html is 10, my input field calculates to 28px on desktop

To remove the auto-zoom I had to change my input to 1.6em. This increased my font size to 32px. Just slightly higher and hardly noticeable. On my iPhone 4&5 I change my html font-size to 15px for portrait and back to 10px for landscape. It appeard that the sweet spot for that pixel size was 48px which is why I changed to from 1.4em (42px) to 1.6em (48px).

The thing you need to do is find the sweet spot on font-size and then convert it backwards in your rem/em sizes.

Jon Tinsman
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1

Here is a hack I used on one of my projects:

select {
    font-size: 2.6rem; // 1rem = 10px
    ...
    transform-origin: ... ...;
    transform: scale(0.5) ...;
}

Ended up with the initial styles and scale I wanted but no zoom on focus.

magom001
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0

In Angular you can use directives to prevent zooming on focus on IOS devices. No meta tag to preserve accessibility.

import { Directive, ElementRef, HostListener } from '@angular/core';

const MINIMAL_FONT_SIZE_BEFORE_ZOOMING_IN_PX = 16;

@Directive({ selector: '[noZoomiOS]' })

export class NoZoomiOSDirective {
  constructor(private el: ElementRef) {}

@HostListener('focus')
  onFocus() {
    this.setFontSize('');
  }

@HostListener('mousedown')
  onMouseDown() {
    this.setFontSize(`${MINIMAL_FONT_SIZE_BEFORE_ZOOMING_IN_PX}px`);
  }

private setFontSize(size: string) {
  const { fontSize: currentInputFontSize } = window.getComputedStyle(this.el.nativeElement, null);

  if (MINIMAL_FONT_SIZE_BEFORE_ZOOMING_IN_PX <= +currentInputFontSize.match(/\d+/)) {
      return;
   }

  const iOS = navigator.platform && /iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.platform);
  iOS 
     && (this.el.nativeElement.style.fontSize = size);
 }
}

You can use it like this <input noZoomiOS > after you declare it in your *.module.ts

Adrien Castagliola
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-2

Please do not use Javascript or hacks to make it work. That will affect your project score on the web.

This will do the trick:

input, input:active, input:focus, input:focus-within, input:hover, input:visited {
    font-size: 16px!important;
}
Chocoprins18
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    How is this not a hack? Unless you happen to *want* all your inputs font size at 16px then this will screw up the look/layout of the site. Not a proper solution at all. – nextgentech Dec 14 '18 at 06:30
  • This is a perfect solution for the question. You are a bit too premature with your answer to my solution. Read the question good first. Why would he/she not want all inputs zoom fixed? Isn't that strange? So you are going to solve a zoom input on a page and not on another page? – Chocoprins18 Dec 14 '18 at 13:28
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    The point is you are "solving" one problem by introducing another--being forced to have every input use 16px for the font size. What if your inputs were sized smaller or larger (as is frequently going to be the case)? My primary criticism is that you are calling out other people for using "hacks", but all this does is force all inputs to a fixed font size to work around the issue (which by the way was already pointed out by the top rated answer 7 years ago). Maybe you should read the many other answers first. – nextgentech Dec 14 '18 at 18:16
-12

IT'S WORK!!! I FINISH MY SEARCH JOURNEY!

<meta name="viewport" content="width=640px, initial-scale=.5, maximum-scale=.5" />

tested on iPhone OS6, Android 2.3.3 Emulator

i have a mobile website that has a fixed width of 640px, and i was facing the autozoom on focus to.

i was trying allot of slutions but none was working on both iPhone and Android!

now for me it's ok to disable the zoom because the website was mobile-first design!

this is where i find it: How to do viewport sizing and scaling for cross browser support?

Community
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ygaradon
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