W3cubDocs

/HTML

<input type="month">

<input> elements of type month create input fields that let the user enter a month and year allowing a month and year to be easily entered. The value is a string whose value is in the format "YYYY-MM", where YYYY is the four-digit year and MM is the month number.

The control's UI varies in general from browser to browser; at the moment support is patchy, with only Chrome/Opera and Edge on desktop — and most modern mobile browser versions — having usable implementations. In browsers that don't support month inputs, the control degrades gracefully to a simple <input type="text">, although there may be automatic validation of the entered text to ensure it's formatted as expected.

For those of you using a browser that doesn't support month, the screenshot below shows what it looks like in Chrome and Opera. Clicking the down arrow on the right hand side brings up a date picker that lets you select the month and year.

The Microsoft Edge month control looks like this:

Value A DOMString representing a month and year, or empty.
Events change and input.
Supported Common Attributes autocomplete, list, readonly, and step.
IDL attributes value
Methods select(), stepDown(), stepUp().

Value

A DOMString representing the value of the month and year entered into the input, in the form YYYY-MM (four digit year, then a hyphen ("-"), followed by the two-digit month. You can set a default value for the input control by including a month and year inside the value attribute, like so:

<label for="bday-month">What month were you born in?</label>
<input id="bday-month" type="month" name="bday-month" value="2017-06">

One thing to note is that the displayed date format differs from the actual value; most user agents display the month and year in a locale-appropriate form, based on the set locale of the user's operating system, whereas the date value is always formatted yyyy-MM.

When the above value is submitted to the server, for example, it will look like bday-month=1978-06.

You can also get and set the date value in JavaScript using the HTMLInputElement.value property, for example:

var monthControl = document.querySelector('input[type="month"]');
monthControl.value = '1978-06';

Additional attributes

In addition to the attributes common to <input> elements, month inputs offer the following attributes:

Attribute Description
max The latest year and month to accept as a valid input
min The earliest year and month to accept as a valid input
readonly A Boolean which, if present, indicates that the input's value can't be edited
step A stepping interval to use when incrementing and decrementing the value of the input field

max

The latest year and month, in the string format discussed in the Value section above, to accept. If the value entered into the element exceeds this, the element fails constraint validation. If the value of the max attribute isn't a valid string in "yyyy-MM" format, then the element has no maximum value.

This value must specify a year-month pairing earlier than or equal to the one specified by the min attribute.

min

The latest year and month to accept, in the same "yyyy-MM" format described above. If the value of the element is less than this, the element fails constraint validation. If a value is specified for min that isn't a valid year and month string, the input has no minimum value.

This value must be a year-month pairing which is less less than or equal to the one specified by the max attribute.

readonly

A Boolean attribute which, if present, means this field cannot be edited by the user. Its value can, however, still be changed from JavaScript code that directly sets the value of the HTMLInputElement.value property.

Note: Because a read-only field cannot have a value, required does not have any effect on inputs with the readonly attribute also specified.

step

The step attribute is a number that specifies the granularity that the value must adhere to, or the special value "any", which is described below. Only values which are equal to the basis for stepping (min if specified, value otherwise, and an appropriate default value if neither of those is provided) are valid.

A string value of "any" means that no stepping is implied, and any value is allowed (barring other constraints, such as min and max).

Note: When the data entered by the user doesn't adhere to the stepping configuration, the user agent may round to the nearest valid value, preferring numbers in the positive direction when there are two equally close options.

For month inputs, the value of step is given in months, with a scaling factor of 1 (since the underlying numeric value is also in months). The default value of step is 1 month.

Using month inputs

Date-related inputs (including month) sound convenient at first glance; they promise an easy UI for choosing dates, and they normalize the data format sent to the server, regardless of the user's locale. However, there are issues with <input type="month"> because at this time, many major browsers don't yet support it.

We'll look at basic and more complex uses of <input type="month">, then offer advice on mitigating the browser support issue in the section Handling browser support).

Basic uses of month

The simplest use of <input type="month"> involves a basic <input> and <label> element combination, as seen below:

<form>
  <label for="bday-month">What month were you born in?</label>
  <input id="bday-month" type="month" name="bday-month">
</form>

Setting maximum and minimum dates

You can use the min and max attributes to restrict the range of dates that the user can choose. In the following example we specify a minimum month of 1900-01 and a maximum month of 1999-12:

<form>
  <label for="bday-month">What month were you born in?</label>
  <input id="bday-month" type="month" name="bday-month"
         min="1900-01" max="1999-12">
</form>

The result here is that:

  • Only months between in January 1900 and December 1999 can be selected; months outside that range can't be scrolled to in the control.
  • Depending on what browser you are using, you might find that months outside the specified range might not be selectable in the month picker (e.g. Edge), or invalid (see Validation) but still available (e.g. Chrome).

Controlling input size

<input type="month"> doesn't support form sizing attributes such as size. You'll have to resort to CSS for sizing needs.

Validation

By default, <input type="month"> does not apply any validation to entered values. The UI implementations generally don't let you enter anything that isn't a date — which is helpful — but you can still submit the form with the month input empty, or enter an invalid date (e.g. the 32nd of April).

To help avoid this, you can use min and max to restrict the available dates (see anch("Setting maximum and minimum dates")), and in addition use the required attribute to make filling in the date mandatory. As a result, supporting browsers will display an error if you try to submit a date that is outside the set bounds, or an empty date field.

Let's look at an example; here we've set minimum and maximum dates, and also made the field required:

<form>
  <div>
    <label for="month">What month would you like to visit us (Summer months only, please)?</label>
    <input id="month" type="month" name="month"
           min="2017-06" max="2017-09" required>
    <span class="validity"></span>
  </div>
  <div>
      <input type="submit" value="Submit form">
  </div>
</form>

If you try to submit the form without both the month and year specified (or with a date outside the set bounds), the browser displays an error. Try playing with the example now:

Here's a screenshot for those of you who aren't using a supporting browser:

Here's the CSS used in the above example. Here we make use of the :valid and :invalid CSS properties to style the input based on whether or not the current value is valid. We had to put the icons on a <span> next to the input, not on the input itself, because in Chrome the generated content is placed inside the form control, and can't be styled or shown effectively.

div {
  margin-bottom: 10px;
  position: relative;
}

input[type="number"] {
  width: 100px;
}

input + span {
  padding-right: 30px;
}

input:invalid+span:after {
  position: absolute;
  content: '✖';
  padding-left: 5px;
}

input:valid+span:after {
  position: absolute;
  content: '✓';
  padding-left: 5px;
}

Important: HTML form validation is not a substitute for scripts that ensure that the entered data is in the proper format. It's far too easy for someone to make adjustments to the HTML that allow them to bypass the validation, or to remove it entirely. It's also possible for someone to simply bypass your HTML entirely and submit the data directly to your server. If your server-side code fails to validate the data it receives, disaster could strike when improperly-formatted data is submitted (or data which is too large, of the wrong type, and so forth).

Handling browser support

As mentioned above, the major problem with using date inputs at the time of writing is that many major browsers don't yet implement them all; only Chrome/Opera and Edge support it on desktop, and most modern browsers on mobile. As an example, the month picker on Chrome for Android looks like this:

Non-supporting browsers gracefully degrade to a text input, but this creates problems both in terms of consistency of user interface (the presented control will be different), and data handling.

The second problem is the more serious of the two. As mentioned earlier, with a month input the actual value is always normalized to the format yyyy-mm. On the other hand, in its default configuration, a text input has no idea what format the date should be in, and this is an issue because of the number of different ways in which people write dates. For example:

  • mmyyyy (072018)
  • mm/yyyy (07/2018)
  • mm-yyyy (07-2018)
  • yyyy-mm (2018-07)
  • Month yyyy (July 2018)
  • ... and so forth.

One way around this is to put a pattern attribute on your month input. Even though the month input doesn't use it, if the browser falls back to treating it like a text input, the pattern will be used. For example, try viewing the following demo in a browser that doesn't support month inputs:

<form>
  <div>
    <label for="month">What month would you like to visit us? (Summer months only, yyyy-mm)</label>
    <input id="month" type="month" name="month"
           min="2017-06" max="2017-09" required
           pattern="[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}">
    <span class="validity"></span>
  </div>
  <div>
      <input type="submit" value="Submit form">
  </div>
</form>

If you try submitting it, you'll see that the browser now displays an error message (and highlights the input as invalid) if your entry doesn't match the pattern nnnn-nn, where n is a number from 0 to 9. Of course, this doesn't stop people from entering invalid dates (such as "0000-42"), or incorrectly formatted dates that follow the pattern.

There's also the problem that the user won't necessarily know which of the many date formats is expected. We have work left to do.

The best way to deal with dates in forms in a cross-browser way (until all of the major browsers have supported them for a while) is to get the user to enter the month and year in separate controls (<select> elements being popular; see below for an implementation), or use JavaScript libraries such as the jQuery date picker plugin.

Examples

In this example, we create two sets of UI elements, each designed to let the user select a month and year. The first is a native month input, and the other is a pair of <select> elements that allow choosing a month and year independently, for compatibility with browsers that don't yet support <input type="month">.

HTML

The form that requests the month and year looks like this:

<form>
  <div class="nativeDatePicker">
    <label for="month-visit">What month would you like to visit us?</label>
    <input type="month" id="month-visit" name="month-visit">
    <span class="validity"></span>
  </div>
  <p class="fallbackLabel">What month would you like to visit us?</p>
  <div class="fallbackDatePicker">
    <div>
      <span>
        <label for="month">Month:</label>
        <select id="month" name="month">
          <option selected>January</option>
          <option>February</option>
          <option>March</option>
          <option>April</option>
          <option>May</option>
          <option>June</option>
          <option>July</option>
          <option>August</option>
          <option>September</option>
          <option>October</option>
          <option>November</option>
          <option>December</option>
        </select>
      </span>
      <span>
        <label for="year">Year:</label>
        <select id="year" name="year">
        </select>
      </span>
    </div>
  </div>
</form>

The <div> with the ID "nativeDatePicker" uses the month input type to request the month and year, while the <div> with the ID "fallbackDatePicker" instead uses a pair of <select> elements. The first requests the month, and the second the year.

The <select> for choosing the month is hardcoded with the names of the months, as they don't change (leaving localization out of things). The list of available year values is dynamically generated depending on the current year (see the code comments below for detailed explanations of how these functions work).

The other part of the example that may be of interest is the feature detection code. In order to detect whether the browser supports <input type="month">, we create a new <input> element, set its type to month, then immediately check what its type is set to. Browsers that don't support type month will return text, since that's What month falls back to when not supported. If <input type="month"> is not supported, we hide the native picker and show the fallback picker UI instead.

JavaScript

The JavaScript code that handles selecting which approach to use and to set up the list of years to include in the non-native year <select> follows:

// define variables
var nativePicker = document.querySelector('.nativeDatePicker');
var fallbackPicker = document.querySelector('.fallbackDatePicker');
var fallbackLabel = document.querySelector('.fallbackLabel');

var yearSelect = document.querySelector('#year');
var monthSelect = document.querySelector('#month');

// hide fallback initially
fallbackPicker.style.display = 'none';
fallbackLabel.style.display = 'none';

// test whether a new date input falls back to a text input or not
var test = document.createElement('input');
test.type = 'month';
// if it does, run the code inside the if() {} block
if(test.type === 'text') {
  // hide the native picker and show the fallback
  nativePicker.style.display = 'none';
  fallbackPicker.style.display = 'block';
  fallbackLabel.style.display = 'block';

  // populate the years dynamically
  // (the months are always the same, therefore hardcoded)
  populateYears();
}

function populateYears() {
  // get the current year as a number
  var date = new Date();
  var year = date.getFullYear();

  // Make this year, and the 100 years before it available in the year <select>
  for(var i = 0; i <= 100; i++) {
    var option = document.createElement('option');
    option.textContent = year-i;
    yearSelect.appendChild(option);
  }
}

Note: Remember that some years have 53 weeks in them (see Weeks per year)! You'll need to take this into consideration when developing production apps.

Specifications

Browser compatibilityUpdate compatibility data on GitHub

Desktop
Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari
Basic support 20 12 No
No
See bug 888320.
No 11 No
No
The input type is recognized, but there is no month-specific control.
Mobile
Android webview Chrome for Android Edge Mobile Firefox for Android Opera for Android iOS Safari Samsung Internet
Basic support Yes Yes ? No Yes Yes ?

See also

© 2005–2018 Mozilla Developer Network and individual contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/input/month