Sass

Utilize our source Sass files to take advantage of variables, maps, mixins, and functions to help you build faster and customize your project.

File structure

Whenever possible, avoid modifying Bootstrap’s core files. For Sass, that means creating your own stylesheet that imports Bootstrap so you can modify and extend it. Assuming you’re using a package manager like npm, you’ll have a file structure that looks like this:

              
                your-project/
                ├── assets/
                |   └──scss
                │      └── theme.scss
                └── node_modules/
                    └── bootstrap
                        ├── js
                        └── scss
              
            

Importing

In your custom.scss, you’ll import Bootstrap’s source Sass files. You have two options: include all of Bootstrap, or pick the parts you need. We encourage the latter, though be aware there are some requirements and dependencies across our components. You also will need to include some JavaScript for our plugins.

              
                // Custom.scss
                // Option A: Include all of Bootstrap

                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/bootstrap";
              
            
              
                // Custom.scss
                // Option B: Include parts of Bootstrap

                // Required
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/functions";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/variables";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/mixins";

                // Optional
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/reboot";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/type";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/images";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/code";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/grid";
              
            

With that setup in place, you can begin to modify any of the Sass variables and maps in your custom.scss. You can also start to add parts of Bootstrap under the // Optional section as needed. We suggest using the full import stack from our bootstrap.scss file as your starting point.

Variable defaults

Every Sass variable in Bootstrap includes the !default flag allowing you to override the variable’s default value in your own Sass without modifying Bootstrap’s source code. Copy and paste variables as needed, modify their values, and remove the !default flag. If a variable has already been assigned, then it won’t be re-assigned by the default values in Bootstrap.

You will find the complete list of Bootstrap’s variables in scss/muse/_variables.scss. Some variables are set to null, these variables don’t output the property unless they are overridden in your configuration.

Variable overrides within the same Sass file can come before or after the default variables. However, when overriding across Sass files, your overrides must come before you import Bootstrap’s Sass files.

Here’s an example that changes the background-color and color for the <body> when importing and compiling Bootstrap via npm:

              
                // Your variable overrides
                $body-bg: #000;
                $body-color: #111;

                // Bootstrap and its default variables
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/bootstrap";
              
            

Modify map

All variables in the $theme-colors map are defined as standalone variables. To modify an existing color in our $theme-colors map, add the following to your custom Sass file:

              
                $primary: #0074d9;
                $danger: #ff4136;
              
            

Later on, theses variables are set in Bootstrap’s $theme-colors map:

              
                $theme-colors: (
                  "primary": $primary,
                  "danger": $danger
                );
              
            

Add to map

To add a new color to $theme-colors, add the new key and value:

              
                $theme-colors: (
                  "custom-color": #900
                );
              
            

Remove from map

To remove colors from $theme-colors, or any other map, use map-remove. Be aware you must insert it between our requirements and options:

              
                // Required
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/functions";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/variables";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/mixins";

                $theme-colors: map-remove($theme-colors, "info", "light", "dark");

                // Optional
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/root";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/reboot";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/type";
                ...
              
            

Required keys

Bootstrap assumes the presence of some specific keys within Sass maps as we used and extend these ourselves. As you customize the included maps, you may encounter errors where a specific Sass map’s key is being used.

For example, we use the primary, success, and danger keys from $theme-colors for links, buttons, and form states. Replacing the values of these keys should present no issues, but removing them may cause Sass compilation issues. In these instances, you’ll need to modify the Sass code that makes use of those values.

              
                // Required
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/functions";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/variables";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/mixins";

                $theme-colors: map-remove($theme-colors, "info", "light", "dark");

                // Optional
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/root";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/reboot";
                @import "../node_modules/bootstrap/scss/type";
                ...
              
            

Functions

Colors

In Bootstrap 5, we’ve dropped the color(), theme-color() and gray() functions because the values are also available as standalone variables. So instead of using theme-color("primary"), you can now just use the $primary variable.

              
                .custom-element {
                  color: $gray-100;
                  background-color: $dark;
                }
              
            

We also have a function for getting a particular level of color. Negative level values will lighten the color, while higher levels will darken.

              
                @function color-level($color: $primary, $level: 0) {
                  $color-base: if($level > 0, $black, $white);
                  $level: abs($level);
                
                  @return mix($color-base, $color, $level * $theme-color-interval);
                }
              
            

In practice, you’d call the function and pass in two parameters: the name of the color from $theme-colors (e.g., primary or danger) and a numeric level.

              
                .custom-element {
                  color: color-level($primary, -10);
                }
              
            

Color contrast

In order to meet WCAG 2.0 accessibility standards for color contrast, authors must provide a contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1, with very few exceptions.

An additional function we include in Bootstrap is the color contrast function, color-contrast. It utilizes the WCAG 2.0 algorithm for calculating contrast thresholds based on relative luminance in a sRGB colorspace to automatically return a light (#fff), dark (#212529) or black (#000) contrast color based on the specified base color. This function is especially useful for mixins or loops where you’re generating multiple classes.

For example, to generate color swatches from our $theme-colors map:

              
                @each $color, $value in $theme-colors {
                  .swatch-#{$color} {
                    color: color-contrast($value);
                  }
                }
              
            

It can also be used for one-off contrast needs:

              
                .custom-element {
                  color: color-contrast(#000); // returns `color: #fff`
                }
              
            

You can also specify a base color with our color map functions:

              
                .custom-element {
                  color: color-contrast($dark); // returns `color: #fff`
                }
              
            

Escape SVG

We use the escape-svg function to escape the <, > and # characters for SVG background images.

Add and Subtract functions

We use the add and subtract functions to wrap the CSS calc function. The primary purpose of these functions is to avoid errors when a “unitless” 0 value is passed into a calc expression. Expressions like calc(10px - 0) will return an error in all browsers, despite being mathematically correct.

Example where the calc is valid:

              
                $border-radius: .25rem;
                $border-width: 1px;
                
                .element {
                  // Output calc(.25rem - 1px) is valid
                  border-radius: calc($border-radius - $border-width);
                }
                
                .element {
                  // Output the same calc(.25rem - 1px) as above
                  border-radius: subtract($border-radius, $border-width);
                }
              
            

Example where the calc is invalid:

              
                $border-radius: .25rem;
                $border-width: 0;

                .element {
                  // Output calc(.25rem - 0) is invalid
                  border-radius: calc($border-radius - $border-width);
                }

                .element {
                  // Output .25rem
                  border-radius: subtract($border-radius, $border-width);
                }