Configuration

A guide to configuring and customizing your Tailwind installation.

Because Tailwind is a framework for building bespoke user interfaces, it has been designed from the ground up with customization in mind.

By default, Tailwind will look for an optional tailwind.config.js file at the root of your project where you can define any customizations.

// Example `tailwind.config.js` file

module.exports = {
  important: true,
  theme: {
    fontFamily: {
      display: ['Gilroy', 'sans-serif'],
      body: ['Graphik', 'sans-serif'],
    },
    extend: {
      colors: {
        cyan: '#9cdbff',
      },
      margin: {
        '96': '24rem',
        '128': '32rem',
      },
    }
  },
  variants: {
    opacity: ['responsive', 'hover']
  }
}

Every section of the config file is optional, so you only have to specify what you'd like to change. Any missing sections will fall back to Tailwind's default configuration.

Creating your configuration file

Generate a Tailwind config file for your project using the Tailwind CLI utility included when you install the tailwindcss npm package:

npx tailwindcss init

This will create a minimal tailwind.config.js file at the root of your project:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  purge: [],
  theme: {
    extend: {},
  },
  variants: {},
  plugins: [],
}

Using a different file name

To use a name other than tailwind.config.js, pass it as an argument on the command-line:

npx tailwindcss init tailwindcss-config.js

If you use a custom file name, you will need to specify it when including Tailwind as a plugin in your PostCSS configuration as well:

// postcss.config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    require('tailwindcss')('./tailwindcss-config.js'),
  ],
}

Scaffolding the entire default configuration

For most users we encourage you to keep your config file as minimal as possible, and only specify the things you want to customize.

If you'd rather scaffold a complete configuration file that includes all of Tailwind's default configuration, use the --full option:

npx tailwindcss init --full

You'll get a file that matches the default configuration file Tailwind uses internally.

Theme

The theme section is where you define your color palette, font stacks, type scale, border sizes, breakpoints — anything related to the visual design of your site.

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  theme: {
    screens: {
      sm: '640px',
      md: '768px',
      lg: '1024px',
      xl: '1280px',
    },
    fontFamily: {
      display: ['Gilroy', 'sans-serif'],
      body: ['Graphik', 'sans-serif'],
    },
    borderWidth: {
      default: '1px',
      '0': '0',
      '2': '2px',
      '4': '4px',
    },
    extend: {
      colors: {
        cyan: '#9cdbff',
      },
      spacing: {
        '96': '24rem',
        '128': '32rem',
      }
    }
  }
}

Learn more about the default theme and how to customize it in the theme configuration guide.

Variants

The variants section lets you control which variants are generated for each core utility plugin.

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  variants: {
    appearance: ['responsive'],
    backgroundColor: ['responsive', 'hover', 'focus'],
    fill: [],
  },
}

Learn more in the variants configuration guide.

Plugins

The plugins section allows you to register third-party plugins with Tailwind that can be used to generate extra utilities, components, base styles, or custom variants.

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    require('tailwindcss-transforms'),
    require('tailwindcss-transitions'),
    require('tailwindcss-border-gradients'),
  ],
}

Learn more about writing your own plugins in the plugin authoring guide.

Prefix

The prefix option allows you to add a custom prefix to all of Tailwind's generated utility classes. This can be really useful when layering Tailwind on top of existing CSS where there might be naming conflicts.

For example, you could add a tw- prefix by setting the prefix option like so:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  prefix: 'tw-',
}

Now every utility will be generated with the configured prefix:

.tw-text-left {
  text-align: left;
}
.tw-text-center {
  text-align: center;
}
.tw-text-right {
  text-align: right;
}
/* etc. */

It's important to understand that this prefix is added to the beginning of each utility name, not to the entire class name.

That means that classes with responsive or state prefixes like sm: or hover: will still have the responsive or state prefix first, with your custom prefix appearing after the colon:

<div class="tw-text-lg md:tw-text-xl tw-bg-red-500 hover:tw-bg-blue-500">
  <!-- -->
</div>

Prefixes are only added to classes generated by Tailwind; no prefix will be added to your own custom classes.

That means if you add your own responsive utility like this:

@responsive {
  .bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
}

...the generated responsive classes will not have your configured prefix:

.bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
@media (min-width: 640px) {
  .sm\:bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
}
@media (min-width: 768px) {
  .md\:bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
}
@media (min-width: 992) {
  .lg\:bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
}
@media (min-width: 1280px) {
  .xl\:bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
}

If you'd like to prefix your own utilities as well, just add the prefix to the class definition:

@responsive {
  .tw-bg-brand-gradient { /* ... */ }
}

Important

The important option lets you control whether or not Tailwind's utilities should be marked with !important. This can be really useful when using Tailwind with existing CSS that has high specificity selectors.

To generate utilities as !important, set the important key in your configuration options to true:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  important: true,
}

Now all of Tailwind's utility classes will be generated as !important:

.leading-none {
  line-height: 1 !important;
}
.leading-tight {
  line-height: 1.25 !important;
}
.leading-snug {
  line-height: 1.375 !important;
}
/* etc. */

Note that any of your own custom utilities will not automatically be marked as !important by enabling this option.

If you'd like to make your own utilities !important, just add !important to the end of each declaration yourself:

@responsive {
  .bg-brand-gradient {
    background-image: linear-gradient(#3490dc, #6574cd) !important;
  }
}

Setting important to true is useful, but can introduce some issues when incorporating third-party JS libraries that add inline styles to your elements—in those cases, Tailwind's !important utilities defeat the inline styles. This is really common with animation libraries, for example.

If you're not facing that issue, feel free to skip to the next section! But if you are facing that issue, you can make utilities "important" in a less aggressive manner by providing a CSS selector instead of a boolean to the important option:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  important: '#app',
}

This configuration will prefix all of your utilities with the given selector, effectively increasing their specificity without actually making them !important.

After you specify the important selector, you'll need to ensure that the root element of your site matches it. Using the example above, we would need to set our root element's id attribute to app in order for styles to work properly.

After your configuration is all set up and your root element matches the selector in your Tailwind config, all of Tailwind's utilities will have a high enough specificity to defeat other classes used in your project, without interfering with inline styles:

<html>
<!-- ... -->
<style>
  .high-specificity .nested .selector {
    color: blue;
  }
</style>
<body id="app">
  <div class="high-specificity">
    <div class="nested">
      <!-- Will be red-500 -->
      <div class="selector text-red-500"><!-- ... --></div>
    </div>
  </div>

  <!-- Will be #bada55 -->
  <div class="text-red-500" style="color: #bada55;"><!-- ... --></div>
</body>
</html>

Separator

The separator option lets you customize what character or string should be used to separate variant prefixes (screen sizes, hover, focus, etc.) from utility names (text-center, items-end, etc.).

We use a colon by default (:), but it can be useful to change this if you're using a templating language like Pug that doesn't support special characters in class names.

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  separator: '_',
}

Core Plugins

The corePlugins section lets you completely disable classes that Tailwind would normally generate by default if you don't need them for your project.

If you don't provide any corePlugins configuration, all core plugins will be enabled by default:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {}

If you'd like to disable specific core plugins, provide an object for corePlugins that sets those plugins to false:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  corePlugins: {
    float: false,
    objectFit: false,
    objectPosition: false,
  }
}

If you'd like to whitelist which core plugins should be enabled, provide an array that includes a list of the core plugins you'd like to use:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  corePlugins: [
    'margin',
    'padding',
    'backgroundColor',
    // ...
  ]
}

If you'd like to disable all of Tailwind's core plugins and simply use Tailwind as a tool for processing your own custom plugins, provide an empty array:

// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
  corePlugins: []
}

Here's a list of every core plugin for reference:

Core PluginDescription
preflightTailwind's base/reset styles
containerThe container component
accessibilityThe sr-only and not-sr-only utilities
alignContentThe align-content utilities like content-end
alignItemsThe align-items utilities like items-center
alignSelfThe align-self utilities like self-end
animationThe animation utilities like animate-none
appearanceThe appearance utilities like appearance-none
backgroundAttachmentThe background-attachment utilities like bg-local
backgroundColorThe background-color utilities like bg-green-700
backgroundOpacityThe background-color opacity utilities like bg-opacity-25
backgroundPositionThe background-position utilities like bg-left-top
backgroundRepeatThe background-repeat utilities like bg-repeat-x
backgroundSizeThe background-size utilities like bg-cover
borderCollapseThe border-collapse utilities like border-collapse
borderColorThe border-color utilities like border-green-700
borderOpacityThe border-color opacity utilities like border-opacity-25
borderRadiusThe border-radius utilities like rounded-t-full
borderStyleThe border-style utilities like border-dotted
borderWidthThe border-width utilities like border-l-2
boxShadowThe box-shadow utilities like shadow-lg
boxSizingThe box-sizing utilities like box-border
clearThe clear utilities like clear-right
cursorThe cursor utilities like cursor-wait
displayThe display utilities like table-column
divideColorThe between elements border-color utilities like divide-gray-500
divideOpacityThe divide-opacity utilities like divide-opacity-50
divideWidthThe between elements border-width utilities like divide-x-2
fillThe fill utilities like fill-current
flexThe flex utilities like flex-auto
flexDirectionThe flex-direction utilities like flex-row-reverse
flexGrowThe flex-grow utilities like flex-grow-0
flexShrinkThe flex-shrink utilities like flex-shrink-0
flexWrapThe flex-wrap utilities like flex-wrap-reverse
floatThe float utilities like float-left
fontFamilyThe font-family utilities like font-serif
fontSizeThe font-size utilities like text-xl
fontSmoothingThe font-smoothing utilities like antialiased
fontStyleThe font-style utilities like italic
fontWeightThe font-weight utilities like font-medium
gapThe gap utilities like col-gap-12
gridAutoFlowThe grid-auto-flow utilities like grid-flow-col
gridColumnThe grid-column utilities like col-span-6
gridColumnEndThe grid-column-end utilities like col-end-7
gridColumnStartThe grid-column-start utilities like col-start-7
gridRowThe grid-row utilities like row-span-3
gridRowEndThe grid-row-end utilities like row-end-4
gridRowStartThe grid-row-start utilities like row-start-4
gridTemplateColumnsThe grid-template-columns utilities like grid-cols-7
gridTemplateRowsThe grid-template-rows utilities like grid-rows-4
heightThe height utilities like h-16
insetThe inset utilities like top-0
justifyContentThe justify-content utilities like justify-center
letterSpacingThe letter-spacing utilities like tracking-normal
lineHeightThe line-height utilities like leading-9
listStylePositionThe list-style-position utilities like list-inside
listStyleTypeThe list-style-type utilities like list-disc
marginThe margin utilities like mb-4
maxHeightThe max-height utilities like max-h-full
maxWidthThe max-width utilities like max-w-3xl
minHeightThe min-height utilities like min-h-full
minWidthThe min-width utilities like min-w-0
objectFitThe object-fit utilities like object-fill
objectPositionThe object-position utilities like object-left-top
opacityThe opacity utilities like opacity-50
orderThe order utilities like order-8
outlineThe outline utilities like outline-none
overflowThe overflow utilities like overflow-x-hidden
overscrollBehaviorThe overscroll-behavior utilities like overscroll-y-contain
paddingThe padding utilities like pr-2
placeholderColorThe placeholder color utilities like placeholder-red-600
placeholderOpacityThe placeholder color opacity utilities like placeholder-opacity-25
pointerEventsThe pointer-events utilities like pointer-events-none
positionThe position utilities like absolute
resizeThe resize utilities like resize-y
rotateThe rotate utilities like rotate-180
scaleThe scale utilities like scale-x-95
skewThe skew utilities like -skew-x-3
spaceThe "space-between" utilities like space-x-4
strokeThe stroke utilities like stroke-current
strokeWidthThe stroke-width utilities like stroke-1
tableLayoutThe table-layout utilities like table-auto
textAlignThe text-align utilities like text-center
textColorThe text-color utilities like text-green-700
textDecorationThe text-decoration utilities like line-through
textOpacityThe text-opacity utilities like text-opacity-50
textTransformThe text-transform utilities like lowercase
transformThe transform utility (for enabling transform features)
transformOriginThe transform-origin utilities like origin-bottom-right
transitionDelayThe transition-delay utilities like delay-200
transitionDurationThe transition-duration utilities like duration-200
transitionPropertyThe transition-property utilities like transition-colors
transitionTimingFunctionThe transition-timing-function utilities like ease-in
translateThe translate utilities like translate-x-full
userSelectThe user-select utilities like select-text
verticalAlignThe vertical-align utilities like align-middle
visibilityThe visibility utilities like visible
whitespaceThe whitespace utilities like whitespace-pre
widthThe width utilities like w-1/4
wordBreakThe word-break utilities like break-words
zIndexThe z-index utilities like z-30

Referencing in JavaScript

It can often be useful to reference your configuration values in your own client-side JavaScript — for example to access some of your theme values when dynamically applying inline styles in a React or Vue component.

To make this easy, Tailwind provides a resolveConfig helper you can use to generate a fully merged version of your configuration object:

import resolveConfig from 'tailwindcss/resolveConfig'
import tailwindConfig from './tailwind.config.js'

const fullConfig = resolveConfig(tailwindConfig)

fullConfig.theme.width[4]
// => '1rem'

fullConfig.theme.screens.md
// => '768px'

fullConfig.theme.boxShadow['2xl']
// => '0 25px 50px -12px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.25)'

Tailwind UI is now in early access!