We want to help you build beautiful, accessible, fast, and secure websites that work cross-browser, and for all of your users. This site is our home for content to help you on that journey, written by members of the Chrome team, and external experts.

On this site

Explore our archive of content, covering subjects across the web development stack. Find the latest news and content on ourblog,see the latestarticles,and discover content by groups on theexplorepage.

For complete courses on key web development topics, check outLearn.Developed by industry experts, these courses take you right through a subject. They are structured to allow you to just dip into one or two modules of interest too.

Want some grab and go code? OurPatternsbreak down common web development requirements. Whether you want to understand how to approach a certain UI component, or need to know how to copy an image to theclipboard,you’ll find a solution there.

To help you make a case for work on UI or Performance, we havecase studies.Find out how other companies have used metrics such as Core Web Vitals to see real results. And, if that’s quite enough reading for one day we also have a great archive ofpodcasts and shows.

We believe that a web with multiple browser engines is important, and that web sites and applications should work well no matter which browser your visitors use. We know that you care about that too, and so content on this site should have cross-browser status clearly explained. You’ll see that many articles have a component showing browser support—the data comes from our friends at MDN, via the Browser Compat Data project that powers the data on MDN pages.

The team

This site is brought to you by the Chrome DevRel team led by:
DevRel Lead
DevRel Experiences Lead
DevRel Platforms Lead
DevRel Content Lead
We hope web.dev helps you to create high quality web experiences today. The Chrome team is also working to make the web better tomorrow. If you want to learn more about what we are doing, and offer feedback on the features we are developing and contributing to, check outChrome for Developers.
Pleaseraise an issuewith information about the page and what's wrong, and we'll take a look.
We feature articles and larger sections of content from external authors. If you would like to pitch an article,contact Rachel Andrewwith an outline of your idea.