HTML a href Attribute
HTML <a> tag
Example
The href attribute specifies the link's destination:
<a href="http://www.w3schools.com">Visit W3Schools</a>
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Try it yourself!
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Definition and Usage
The href attribute specifies the URL (web resource) to be loaded when the
link
is clicked.
The href or the name attribute must be present in the <a> tag.
Syntax
Syntax Example
<a href="http://www.w3schools.com">
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Attribute Values
Value |
Description |
URL |
The web resource/address to load when the link is
clicked. Possible URL values:
- An absolute URL - Is used to navigate to another web site (like href="www.example.com")
- A relative URL - Is used to navigate within a site (like href="example.html")
- An anchor URL - Is used to navigate within a single page (like href="#bottom")
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Browser Support

The href attribute is supported in all major browsers.
What is an URL
A Uniform Resource Locator (URL) is used to address a
document (or other data) on the World Wide Web.
A full Web address like this: http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_intro.asp
follows these syntax rules:
scheme://host.domain:port/path/filename
The scheme is defining the type of Internet
service. The most common type is http.
The domain is defining the Internet domain name
like w3schools.com.
The host is defining the domain host. If omitted, the
default host for http is www.
The :port is defining the port number at the
host. The port number is normally omitted. The default port
number for http is 80.
The path is defining a path (a sub directory)
at the server. If the path is omitted, the resource (the
document) must be located at the root directory of the Web site.
The filename is defining the name of a document. The
default filename might be default.asp, or index.html or
something else depending on the settings of the Web server.
Tips and Notes
Tip: All URLs should be URL encoded when required.
HTML <a> tag
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