Setting href attribute at runtime

Small performance test comparision for three solutions:

  1. $(".link").prop('href',"https://example.com")
  2. $(".link").attr('href',"https://example.com")
  3. document.querySelector(".link").href="https://example.com";

enter image description here

Here you can perform test by yourself https://jsperf.com/a-href-js-change


We can read href values in following ways

  1. let href = $(selector).prop('href');
  2. let href = $(selector).attr('href');
  3. let href = document.querySelector(".link").href;

enter image description here

Here you can perform test by yourself https://jsperf.com/a-href-js-read


In jQuery 1.6+ it's better to use:

$(selector).prop('href',"http://www...") to set the value, and

$(selector).prop('href') to get the value

In short, .prop gets and sets values on the DOM object, and .attr gets and sets values in the HTML. This makes .prop a little faster and possibly more reliable in some contexts.


Set the href attribute with

$(selector).attr('href', 'url_goes_here');

and read it using

$(selector).attr('href');

Where "selector" is any valid jQuery selector for your <a> element (".myClass" or "#myId" to name the most simple ones).

Hope this helps !


To get or set an attribute of an HTML element, you can use the element.attr() function in jQuery.

To get the href attribute, use the following code:

var a_href = $('selector').attr('href');

To set the href attribute, use the following code:

$('selector').attr('href','http://example.com');

In both cases, please use the appropriate selector. If you have set the class for the anchor element, use '.class-name' and if you have set the id for the anchor element, use '#element-id'.