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HTML onbeforeunload Attribute


Definition and Usage

The onbeforeunload event fires when the document is about to be unloaded.

This event allows you to display a message in a confirmation dialog box to inform the user whether he/she wants to stay or leave the current page.

The default message that appears in the confirmation box, is different in different browsers. However, the standard message is something like "Are you sure you want to leave this page?". You cannot remove this message.

However, you can write a custom message together with the default message. See the first example on this page.

Note: In Firefox, only the default message will be displayed (not the custom message (if any)).


Applies to

The onbeforeunload attribute is part of the Event Attributes, and can be used on the following element:

Elements Event
<body> onbeforeunload

Example

Execute a JavaScript when the page is about to be unloaded:

<body onbeforeunload="return myFunction()">
Try it Yourself »

Browser Support

The numbers in the table specify the first browser version that fully supports the event.

Event Attribute
onbeforeunload Yes Yes Yes Yes 15.0