Using margin:auto to vertically-align a div

savinger picture savinger · Sep 14, 2012 · Viewed 247.3k times · Source

So I know we can center a div horizontally if we use margin:0 auto;. Should margin:auto auto; work how I think it should work? Centering it vertically as well?

Why doesn't vertical-align:middle; work either?

JSFiddle

Answer

o.v. picture o.v. · Sep 14, 2012

Update Aug 2020

Although the below is still worth reading for the useful info, we have had Flexbox for some time now, so just use that, as per this answer.


You can't use:

vertical-align:middle because it's not applicable to block-level elements

margin-top:auto and margin-bottom:auto because their used values would compute as zero

margin-top:-50% because percentage-based margin values are calculated relative to the width of containing block

In fact, the nature of document flow and element height calculation algorithms make it impossible to use margins for centering an element vertically inside its parent. Whenever a vertical margin's value is changed, it will trigger a parent element height re-calculation (re-flow), which would in turn trigger a re-center of the original element... making it an infinite loop.

You can use:

A few workarounds like this which work for your scenario; the three elements have to be nested like so:

.container {
    display: table;
    height: 100%;
    position: absolute;
    overflow: hidden;
    width: 100%;
}
.helper {
    #position: absolute;
    #top: 50%;
    display: table-cell;
    vertical-align: middle;
}
.content {
    #position: relative;
    #top: -50%;
    margin: 0 auto;
    width: 200px;
    border: 1px solid orange;
}
<div class="container">
    <div class="helper">
        <div class="content">
            <p>stuff</p>
        </div>
    </div>
</div

JSFiddle works fine according to Browsershot.