Typography

Tailwind CSS leading-tight Class

The leading-tight utility class generates the following CSS when applied to an element.

CSS Output

CSS
.leading-tight {
  line-height: 1.25;
}

Variants

Use these variant prefixes to apply leading-tight conditionally:

responsive:leading-tighthover:leading-tightfocus:leading-tight

Use It

HTML
<h2 class="text-2xl font-bold leading-tight">
  A Multi-Line Heading With Tight Leading
</h2>

Understanding leading-tight

The Tailwind CSS leading-tight utility applies line-height: 1.25; to an element when added to its class attribute. It sets a tight line height of 1.25. Good for headings and short text where compact vertical spacing improves visual cohesion.

This utility is part of Tailwind's Typography module, designed for styling text with appropriate sizes, weights, spacing, alignment, and decorations. In Tailwind's utility-first workflow, you add leading-tight directly to your HTML elements rather than writing custom CSS. This approach accelerates development and keeps styles co-located with your markup, making it easy to see exactly how each element is styled at a glance.

Common responsive variants include sm:leading-tight, md:leading-tight, lg:leading-tight, and xl:leading-tight, allowing different behavior at each breakpoint. State variants like hover:leading-tight and focus:leading-tight enable interactive styling without any JavaScript. You can also combine multiple variants for fine-grained control over when the utility applies.

This class works well alongside `leading-none`, `leading-normal`, `leading-relaxed`, `text-2xl` to build complete, production-ready interfaces. Tailwind's tree-shaking ensures only utilities you actually use appear in your final CSS bundle, keeping file sizes minimal. Browser support for the underlying CSS is excellent across Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge.

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