Typography

CSS word-spacing Property

Sets the spacing between words in text

Syntax

CSS
word-spacing: normal | <length>;

Values

ValueDescription
normalDefault word spacing
<length>Additional spacing between words

Example

CSS
.spaced-text {
  word-spacing: 0.2em;
}

Understanding CSS word-spacing

The CSS word-spacing property sets the spacing between words in text. As part of the Typography module in CSS, it is one of the most commonly used properties for controlling the visual presentation of web pages.

You can set word-spacing to values such as normal, <length>, among others. Each value changes how the browser renders the affected element, giving you fine-grained control over your page layout and design. Choosing the right value depends on the specific design requirements of your project.

Common use cases for the word-spacing property include responsive web design, component-based layouts, and creating visually consistent interfaces across devices. It works closely with related properties like letter-spacing, white-space, text-align to achieve complex styling effects. Understanding how these properties interact helps you write cleaner, more maintainable stylesheets.

Browser support for word-spacing is excellent across all modern browsers including Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge. For older browsers, consider using fallback values or progressive enhancement strategies. The property can also be set dynamically via JavaScript using element.style.wordSpacing or the CSS custom properties (variables) approach for theming.

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