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How to style a checkbox using CSS

I am trying to style a checkbox using the following:

But the style is not applied. The checkbox still displays its default style. How do I give it the specified style?

I wrote a tutorial about how to customize checkboxes and radios with CSS only, as well as create on/off switches. Check it out!
Whatever decision you make for styling checkboxes or radio buttons via CSS please make sure that they are accessible. As of this comment I believe only 2 of the 33 answers so far are accessible. For the rest of the answers you're cutting off most, if not all accessibility. (ctrl+f "accessibility")
There's a native CSS property for this now, skip to this answer.

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18 revs, 7 users 78%

UPDATE:

The below answer references the state of things before widespread availability of CSS 3. In modern browsers (including Internet Explorer 9 and later) it is more straightforward to create checkbox replacements with your preferred styling, without using JavaScript.

Here are some useful links:

Creating Custom Form Checkboxes with Just CSS

Easy CSS Checkbox Generator

Stuff You Can Do With The Checkbox Hack

Implementing Custom Checkboxes and Radio Buttons with CSS3

How to Style a Checkbox With CSS

It is worth noting that the fundamental issue has not changed. You still can't apply styles (borders, etc.) directly to the checkbox element and have those styles affect the display of the HTML checkbox. What has changed, however, is that it's now possible to hide the actual checkbox and replace it with a styled element of your own, using nothing but CSS. In particular, because CSS now has a widely supported :checked selector, you can make your replacement correctly reflect the checked status of the box.

OLDER ANSWER

Here's a useful article about styling checkboxes. Basically, that writer found that it varies tremendously from browser to browser, and that many browsers always display the default checkbox no matter how you style it. So there really isn't an easy way.

It's not hard to imagine a workaround where you would use JavaScript to overlay an image on the checkbox and have clicks on that image cause the real checkbox to be checked. Users without JavaScript would see the default checkbox.

Edited to add: here's a nice script that does this for you; it hides the real checkbox element, replaces it with a styled span, and redirects the click events.


This answer is getting old! The primary link leads to a site comparing IE6 and IE7 styles...
Fair point -- and the basic point isn't really true anymore, in modern browsers. I've updated with some newer links, but left the original as a resource for older browsers.
Easy CSS Checkbox Generator, was really easy and n00b friendly. Comes with GUI for customized creation too! Well appreciated. :)
I'm interested in the old answer because I want this feature to be compatible with IE8+ & other browsers (chrome, firefox & safari). However I cannot find much feedback regarding the plugin you recommend ryanfait.com/resources/custom-checkboxes-and-radio-buttons
This is not a very useful answer - it's just a list of articles, most of which are very old now.
P
Peter Mortensen

You can achieve quite a cool custom checkbox effect by using the new abilities that come with the :after and :before pseudo classes. The advantage to this, is: You don't need to add anything more to the DOM, just the standard checkbox.

Note this will only work for compatible browsers. I believe this is related to the fact that some browsers do not allow you to set :after and :before on input elements. Which unfortunately means for the moment only WebKit browsers are supported. Firefox + Internet Explorer will still allow the checkboxes to function, just unstyled, and this will hopefully change in the future (the code does not use vendor prefixes).

This is a WebKit browser solution only (Chrome, Safari, Mobile browsers)

See Example Fiddle

$(function() { $('input').change(function() { $('div').html(Math.random()); }); }); /* Main Classes */ .myinput[type="checkbox"]:before { position: relative; display: block; width: 11px; height: 11px; border: 1px solid #808080; content: ""; background: #FFF; } .myinput[type="checkbox"]:after { position: relative; display: block; left: 2px; top: -11px; width: 7px; height: 7px; border-width: 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: #B3B3B3 #dcddde #dcddde #B3B3B3; content: ""; background-image: linear-gradient(135deg, #B1B6BE 0%, #FFF 100%); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-position: center; } .myinput[type="checkbox"]:checked:after { background-image: url('data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAcAAAAHCAQAAABuW59YAAAACXBIWXMAAAsTAAALEwEAmpwYAAAAIGNIUk0AAHolAACAgwAA+f8AAIDpAAB1MAAA6mAAADqYAAAXb5JfxUYAAAB2SURBVHjaAGkAlv8A3QDyAP0A/QD+Dam3W+kCAAD8APYAAgTVZaZCGwwA5wr0AvcA+Dh+7UX/x24AqK3Wg/8nt6w4/5q71wAAVP9g/7rTXf9n/+9N+AAAtpJa/zf/S//DhP8H/wAA4gzWj2P4lsf0JP0A/wADAHB0Ngka6UmKAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC'), linear-gradient(135deg, #B1B6BE 0%, #FFF 100%); } .myinput[type="checkbox"]:disabled:after { -webkit-filter: opacity(0.4); } .myinput[type="checkbox"]:not(:disabled):checked:hover:after { background-image: url('data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAcAAAAHCAQAAABuW59YAAAACXBIWXMAAAsTAAALEwEAmpwYAAAAIGNIUk0AAHolAACAgwAA+f8AAIDpAAB1MAAA6mAAADqYAAAXb5JfxUYAAAB2SURBVHjaAGkAlv8A3QDyAP0A/QD+Dam3W+kCAAD8APYAAgTVZaZCGwwA5wr0AvcA+Dh+7UX/x24AqK3Wg/8nt6w4/5q71wAAVP9g/7rTXf9n/+9N+AAAtpJa/zf/S//DhP8H/wAA4gzWj2P4lsf0JP0A/wADAHB0Ngka6UmKAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC'), linear-gradient(135deg, #8BB0C2 0%, #FFF 100%); } .myinput[type="checkbox"]:not(:disabled):hover:after { background-image: linear-gradient(135deg, #8BB0C2 0%, #FFF 100%); border-color: #85A9BB #92C2DA #92C2DA #85A9BB; } .myinput[type="checkbox"]:not(:disabled):hover:before { border-color: #3D7591; } /* Large checkboxes */ .myinput.large { height: 22px; width: 22px; } .myinput.large[type="checkbox"]:before { width: 20px; height: 20px; } .myinput.large[type="checkbox"]:after { top: -20px; width: 16px; height: 16px; } /* Custom checkbox */ .myinput.large.custom[type="checkbox"]:checked:after { background-image: url('data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAABAAAAAQCAYAAAAf8/9hAAAAGHRFWHRBdXRob3IAbWluZWNyYWZ0aW5mby5jb23fZidLAAAAk0lEQVQ4y2P4//8/AyUYwcAD+OzN/oMwshjRBoA0Gr8+DcbIhhBlAEyz+qZZ/7WPryHNAGTNMOxpJvo/w0/uP0kGgGwGaZbrKgfTGnLc/0nyAgiDbEY2BCRGdCDCnA2yGeYVog0Aae5MV4c7Gzk6CRqAbDM2w/EaQEgzXgPQnU2SAcTYjNMAYm3GaQCxNuM0gFwMAPUKd8XyBVDcAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC'), linear-gradient(135deg, #B1B6BE 0%, #FFF 100%); } .myinput.large.custom[type="checkbox"]:not(:disabled):checked:hover:after { background-image: url('data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAABAAAAAQCAYAAAAf8/9hAAAAGHRFWHRBdXRob3IAbWluZWNyYWZ0aW5mby5jb23fZidLAAAAk0lEQVQ4y2P4//8/AyUYwcAD+OzN/oMwshjRBoA0Gr8+DcbIhhBlAEyz+qZZ/7WPryHNAGTNMOxpJvo/w0/uP0kGgGwGaZbrKgfTGnLc/0nyAgiDbEY2BCRGdCDCnA2yGeYVog0Aae5MV4c7Gzk6CRqAbDM2w/EaQEgzXgPQnU2SAcTYjNMAYm3GaQCxNuM0gFwMAPUKd8XyBVDcAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC'), linear-gradient(135deg, #8BB0C2 0%, #FFF 100%); }

Normal:
Small:
Large:
Custom icon:

Bonus Webkit style flipswitch fiddle

$(function() { var f = function() { $(this).next().text($(this).is(':checked') ? ':checked' : ':not(:checked)'); }; $('input').change(f).trigger('change'); }); body { font-family: arial; } .flipswitch { position: relative; background: white; width: 120px; height: 40px; -webkit-appearance: initial; border-radius: 3px; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0); outline: none; font-size: 14px; font-family: Trebuchet, Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: bold; cursor: pointer; border: 1px solid #ddd; } .flipswitch:after { position: absolute; top: 5%; display: block; line-height: 32px; width: 45%; height: 90%; background: #fff; box-sizing: border-box; text-align: center; transition: all 0.3s ease-in 0s; color: black; border: #888 1px solid; border-radius: 3px; } .flipswitch:after { left: 2%; content: "OFF"; } .flipswitch:checked:after { left: 53%; content: "ON"; }

Webkit friendly mobile-style checkbox/flipswitch

 
 


Firefox 33.1/Linux: The fiddle shows just default checkboxes. Nothing looks different.
@robsch This is clearly pointed out in the original post. Version of firefox or OS is irrelevant, it does not work in firefox. "FF + IE will still allow the check-boxes to function, just un-styled..."
A good approach. But not all browsers doing it good. Only Chrome has the best output as far as I examined.
Very nice. However... It is again an IE 5.x approach. Webkit only. Because it doesn't always follow the rules... That's the entire problem with webkit browsers.
I get the default checkboxes in Firefox 58 and IE11 on Win too.
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Brad Turek

Before you begin (as of Jan 2015)

The original question and answer are now ~5 years old. As such, this is a little bit of an update.

Firstly, there are a number of approaches when it comes to styling checkboxes. The basic tenet is:

You will need to hide the default checkbox control which is styled by your browser, and cannot be overridden in any meaningful way using CSS. With the control hidden, you will still need to be able to detect and toggle its checked state. The checked state of the checkbox will need to be reflected by styling a new element.

The solution (in principle)

The above can be accomplished by a number of means — and you will often hear that using CSS3 pseudo-elements is the right way. Actually, there is no real right or wrong way, it depends on the approach most suitable for the context you will be using it in. That said, I have a preferred one.

Wrap your checkbox in a label element. This will mean that even when it is hidden, you can still toggle its checked state by clicking anywhere within the label. Hide your checkbox. Add a new element after the checkbox which you will style accordingly. It must appear after the checkbox so it can be selected using CSS and styled dependent on the :checked state. CSS cannot select 'backwards'.

The solution (in code)

label input { visibility: hidden;/* <-- Hide the default checkbox. The rest is to hide and allow tabbing, which display:none prevents */ display: block; height: 0; width: 0; position: absolute; overflow: hidden; } label span {/* <-- Style the artificial checkbox */ height: 10px; width: 10px; border: 1px solid grey; display: inline-block; } [type=checkbox]:checked + span {/* <-- Style its checked state */ background: black; }

Refinement (using icons)

"But hey!" I hear you shout. What about if I want to show a nice little tick or cross in the box? And I don't want to use background images!

Well, this is where CSS3's pseudo-elements can come into play. These support the content property which allows you to inject Unicode icons representing either state. Alternatively, you could use a third party font icon source such as font awesome (though make sure you also set the relevant font-family, e.g. to FontAwesome)

label input { display: none; /* Hide the default checkbox */ } /* Style the artificial checkbox */ label span { height: 10px; width: 10px; border: 1px solid grey; display: inline-block; position: relative; } /* Style its checked state...with a ticked icon */ [type=checkbox]:checked + span:before { content: '\2714'; position: absolute; top: -5px; left: 0; }


Except for: simplified HTML, simplified CSS, detailed explanation.
@AnthonyHayward - updated answer, this was due to using display:none which does not instantiate the control in a tabbable way, I've changed
I was struggling to find an example in which the checkbox was inside of the label rather than before/after it. This is a very well documented and explained solution. It would be great to see this answer updated for January 2016.
Still not tabbable with display: none.
Replace visibility: hidden; with opacity: 0 !important; if you're still having trouble with tabbing.
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Peter Mortensen

There is a way to do this using just CSS. We can (ab)use the label element and style that element instead. The caveat is that this will not work for Internet Explorer 8 and lower versions.

.myCheckbox input { position: relative; z-index: -9999; } .myCheckbox span { width: 20px; height: 20px; display: block; background: url("link_to_image"); } .myCheckbox input:checked + span { background: url("link_to_another_image"); }


@GandalfStormCrow this will work for any browser that supports the :checked pseudo-class, which IE8 does NOT support. You can check if this works with selectivizr.com - which adds support for :checked and friends.
In other words, IE9 and later versions supports :checked.
There is a polyfill for IE8 and below: github.com/rdebeasi/checked-polyfill
It's working, but first time it flickers. Why is it happening?
I believe hidden inputs never take keyboard focus, so these are unreachable by keyboard.
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Jinu Kurian

I always use pseudo elements :before and :after for changing the appearance of checkboxes and radio buttons. it's works like a charm.

Refer this link for more info

CODEPEN

Steps

Hide the default checkbox using css rules like visibility:hidden or opacity:0 or position:absolute;left:-9999px etc. Create a fake checkbox using :before element and pass either an empty or a non-breaking space '\00a0'; When the checkbox is in :checked state, pass the unicode content: "\2713", which is a checkmark; Add :focus style to make the checkbox accessible. Done

Here is how I did it.

.box { background: #666666; color: #ffffff; width: 250px; padding: 10px; margin: 1em auto; } p { margin: 1.5em 0; padding: 0; } input[type="checkbox"] { visibility: hidden; } label { cursor: pointer; } input[type="checkbox"] + label:before { border: 1px solid #333; content: "\00a0"; display: inline-block; font: 16px/1em sans-serif; height: 16px; margin: 0 .25em 0 0; padding: 0; vertical-align: top; width: 16px; } input[type="checkbox"]:checked + label:before { background: #fff; color: #333; content: "\2713"; text-align: center; } input[type="checkbox"]:checked + label:after { font-weight: bold; } input[type="checkbox"]:focus + label::before { outline: rgb(59, 153, 252) auto 5px; }

Much more stylish using :before and :after

body{ font-family: sans-serif; } .container { margin-top: 50px; margin-left: 20px; margin-right: 20px; } .checkbox { width: 100%; margin: 15px auto; position: relative; display: block; } .checkbox input[type="checkbox"] { width: auto; opacity: 0.00000001; position: absolute; left: 0; margin-left: -20px; } .checkbox label { position: relative; } .checkbox label:before { content: ''; position: absolute; left: 0; top: 0; margin: 4px; width: 22px; height: 22px; transition: transform 0.28s ease; border-radius: 3px; border: 2px solid #7bbe72; } .checkbox label:after { content: ''; display: block; width: 10px; height: 5px; border-bottom: 2px solid #7bbe72; border-left: 2px solid #7bbe72; -webkit-transform: rotate(-45deg) scale(0); transform: rotate(-45deg) scale(0); transition: transform ease 0.25s; will-change: transform; position: absolute; top: 12px; left: 10px; } .checkbox input[type="checkbox"]:checked ~ label::before { color: #7bbe72; } .checkbox input[type="checkbox"]:checked ~ label::after { -webkit-transform: rotate(-45deg) scale(1); transform: rotate(-45deg) scale(1); } .checkbox label { min-height: 34px; display: block; padding-left: 40px; margin-bottom: 0; font-weight: normal; cursor: pointer; vertical-align: sub; } .checkbox label span { position: absolute; top: 50%; -webkit-transform: translateY(-50%); transform: translateY(-50%); } .checkbox input[type="checkbox"]:focus + label::before { outline: 0; }


m
maxshuty

2022 accessible solution - use accent-color

Use the new accent-color property and make certain to meet a proper contrast ratio of at least 3:1 to ensure accessibility. This also works for radio buttons.

.red-input { accent-color: #9d3039; height: 20px; /* not needed */ width: 20px; /* not needed */ }


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Jan Turoň

I'd follow the advice of SW4's answer. Not anymore: Volomike's answer is far superior to all the answers here (note my suggested improvement in the comment to the answer). Proceed reading this answer if you are curious about alternative approaches, which this answer comments.

First of all, hide the checkbox and to cover it with a custom span, suggesting this HTML:

<label>
  <input type="checkbox">
  <span>send newsletter</span>
</label>

The wrap in label neatly allows clicking the text without the need of "for-id" attribute linking. However,

Do not hide it using visibility: hidden or display: none

It works by clicking or tapping, but that is a lame way to use checkboxes. Some people still use much more effective Tab to move focus, Space to activate, and hiding with that method disables it. If the form is long, one will save someone's wrists to use tabindex or accesskey attributes. And if you observe the system checkbox behavior, there is a decent shadow on hover. The well styled checkbox should follow this behavior.

cobberboy's answer recommends Font Awesome which is usually better than bitmap since fonts are scalable vectors. Working with the HTML above, I'd suggest these CSS rules:

Hide checkboxes input[type="checkbox"] { position: absolute; opacity: 0; z-index: -1; } I use just negative z-index since my example uses big enough checkbox skin to cover it fully. I don't recommend left: -999px since it is not reusable in every layout. Bushan wagh's answer provides a bulletproof way to hide it and convince the browser to use tabindex, so it is a good alternative. Anyway, both is just a hack. The proper way today is appearance: none, see Joost's answer: input[type="checkbox"] { appearance: none; -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; } Style checkbox label input[type="checkbox"] + span { font: 16pt sans-serif; color: #000; } Add checkbox skin input[type="checkbox"] + span:before { font: 16pt FontAwesome; content: '\00f096'; display: inline-block; width: 16pt; padding: 2px 0 0 3px; margin-right: 0.5em; }

\00f096 is Font Awesome's square-o, padding is adjusted to provide even dotted outline on focus (see below).

Add checkbox checked skin input[type="checkbox"]:checked + span:before { content: '\00f046'; }

\00f046 is Font Awesome's check-square-o, which is not the same width as square-o, which is the reason for the width style above.

Add focus outline input[type="checkbox"]:focus + span:before { outline: 1px dotted #aaa; } Safari doesn't provide this feature (see @Jason Sankey's comment), see this answer for Safari-only CSS Set gray color for disabled checkbox input[type="checkbox"]:disabled + span { color: #999; } Set hover shadow on non-disabled checkbox input[type="checkbox"]:not(:disabled) + span:hover:before { text-shadow: 0 1px 2px #77F; }

Test it on JS Fiddle

Try to hover the mouse over the checkboxes and use Tab and Shift+Tab to move and Space to toggle.


Upvote for covering the focus issue: customisations like this shouldn't remove basic functionality. Note though that Safari doesn't give keyboard focus to checkboxes (even default ones), that confused me momentarily when implementing a solution that included focus handling.
Most of these answers ignore accessibility. I love that this answer keeps that in tact.
I ended up doing a spin off of this answer in mine. I could not rely upon external libraries like FontAwesome, so I baked some advice from this answer into my own custom solution and kept everything accessible like this answer does. I also included a radio button design: stackoverflow.com/a/58570835/4826740 Thanks Jan for the awesome help!
@maxshuty I like your approach, too: when someone creates a library, oftentimes it is just a confession that he can't code simple in the native language of his choice. IMHO FontAwesome screwed up with their Free plan using javascript to load the font, but I still like them as they stay open source and free license. I usually end up font-forging subset of free icons I need in particular project (usually max 5kB). I would gladly pay if they saved me the effort, but not the insane 99$ per year as they propose in their Pro plan.
V
Volomike

With pure CSS, nothing fancy with :before and :after, no transforms, you can turn off the default appearance and then style it with an inline background image like the following example. This works in Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and now Edge (Chromium Edge).

INPUT[type=checkbox]:focus { outline: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2); } INPUT[type=checkbox] { background-color: #DDD; border-radius: 2px; appearance: none; -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; width: 17px; height: 17px; cursor: pointer; position: relative; top: 5px; } INPUT[type=checkbox]:checked { background-color: #409fd6; background: #409fd6 url("data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhCwAKAIABAP////3cnSH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAALAAoAAAIUjH+AC73WHIsw0UCjglraO20PNhYAOw==") 3px 3px no-repeat; }


Great idea, Volomike. Some improvements: 1) set width and height to 1em and top to 0.2em to make it scallable with the font size. 2) set background to center/cover to scale with the size. Also, the background-color in your code is redundant. 3) remove the cursor: pointer - keep the default behavior and let user set it in their stylesheet.
You can also just use: all: unset, for the checkbox, which has almost identical support out of the box, without requiring the browser-specific flags, and the caveats that come along with appearance. :)
T
TylerH

The CSS Basic User Interface Module Level 4 adds support for this (finally) via a new solution called accent-color, and it's actually quite simple, unlike pretty much every other answer here:

input { accent-color: rebeccapurple; }

Simply set whatever CSS color (e.g. named value, hex code, etc.) you want in as the value of accent-color, and it will be applied.

This currently works in Chrome (v93+), Edge (v93+), Firefox (v92+), Opera (v79+), and Safari (v15.4+).

Note: Edge, Chrome, and Opera (and possibly Safari; I can't test that) currently don't support alpha channel values via rgba() either (the RGB values of rgba() will still "work"; the alpha channel will simply be ignored by the browser). See MDN Browser Support for more information.


Nice! But could it be, that accent-color: rgba(0,0,0,0.1) ignores the alpha channel? My checkbox background is simply black.
@Flippowitsch On Firefox 92.0 I see the correct alpha channel. Looks like Chrome 93 and Edge 93 don't support alpha channels for it quite yet... good catch! I'll update my answer.
D
Dean Van Greunen

Simple to implement and easily customizable solution

After a lot of search and testing I got this solution which is simple to implement and easier to customize. In this solution:

You don't need external libraries and files You don't need to add extra HTML in your page You don't need to change checkbox names and id

Simple put the flowing CSS at the top of your page and all checkboxes style will change like this:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/hclvc.jpg

input[type=checkbox] { transform: scale(1.5); } input[type=checkbox] { width: 30px; height: 30px; margin-right: 8px; cursor: pointer; font-size: 17px; visibility: hidden; } input[type=checkbox]:after, input[type=checkbox]::after { content: " "; background-color: #fff; display: inline-block; margin-left: 10px; padding-bottom: 5px; color: #00BFF0; width: 22px; height: 25px; visibility: visible; border: 1px solid #00BFF0; padding-left: 3px; border-radius: 5px; } input[type=checkbox]:checked:after, input[type=checkbox]:checked::after { content: "\2714"; padding: -5px; font-weight: bold; }


Nice solution. But I dont see it working on Firefox, IE or Edge (there is no checkbox)
@Jono I've updated the answer, please try it now.
@DeanVanGreunen still no checkbox on Firefox (Mac, 97.0.2) - I am not able to check IE or Edge
I see a huge checkbox on Edge (i.stack.imgur.com/kOhLI.png), but yes it is blank in Firefox (no blue checkbox shown or even clickable). cc @Jono IE is not supported by Stack Overflow and Stack Snippets won't run on that browser. Nor will most other code sandbox sites like JSFiddle or CodePen, to my knowledge...
V
Vadim Ovchinnikov

You can style checkboxes with a little trickery using the label element an example is below:

.checkbox > input[type=checkbox] { visibility: hidden; } .checkbox { position: relative; display: block; width: 80px; height: 26px; margin: 0 auto; background: #FFF; border: 1px solid #2E2E2E; border-radius: 2px; -webkit-border-radius: 2px; -moz-border-radius: 2px; } .checkbox:after { position: absolute; display: inline; right: 10px; content: 'no'; color: #E53935; font: 12px/26px Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: bold; text-transform: capitalize; z-index: 0; } .checkbox:before { position: absolute; display: inline; left: 10px; content: 'yes'; color: #43A047; font: 12px/26px Arial, sans-serif; font-weight: bold; text-transform: capitalize; z-index: 0; } .checkbox label { position: absolute; display: block; top: 3px; left: 3px; width: 34px; height: 20px; background: #2E2E2E; cursor: pointer; transition: all 0.5s linear; -webkit-transition: all 0.5s linear; -moz-transition: all 0.5s linear; border-radius: 2px; -webkit-border-radius: 2px; -moz-border-radius: 2px; z-index: 1; } .checkbox input[type=checkbox]:checked + label { left: 43px; }

And a FIDDLE for the above code. Note that some CSS doesn't work in older versions of browsers, but I'm sure there are some fancy JavaScript examples out there!


How to use it where the checkbox has it's won label?
@Metaphor Just add a second label. You can apply multiple labels to the same element (e.g. they can use the same for attribute value).
V
Vadim Ovchinnikov

You can avoid adding extra markup. This works everywhere except IE via setting CSS appearance:

input[type="checkbox"] { -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; appearance: none; /* Styling checkbox */ width: 16px; height: 16px; background-color: red; } input[type="checkbox"]:checked { background-color: green; }


I like this approach - it is a bit hacky as you shouldn't ever really use appearance in css but it is much cleaner than some of the other answers using before and after. And for something like this I feel JavaScript is complete overkill.
T
TylerH

Recently I found a quite interesting solution to the problem.

You could use appearance: none; to turn off the checkbox's default style and then write your own over it like described here (Example 4).

input[type=checkbox] { width: 23px; height: 23px; -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; appearance: none; margin-right: 10px; background-color: #878787; outline: 0; border: 0; display: inline-block; -webkit-box-shadow: none !important; -moz-box-shadow: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; } input[type=checkbox]:focus { outline: none; border: none !important; -webkit-box-shadow: none !important; -moz-box-shadow: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; } input[type=checkbox]:checked { background-color: green; text-align: center; line-height: 15px; }

Unfortunately browser support is quite bad for the appearance option. From my personal testing I only got Opera and Chrome working correctly. But this would be the way to go to keep it simple when better support comes or you only want to use Chrome/Opera.

Example JSFiddle

"Can I use?" link


Indeed appearance is just what we need for this; just bear in mind it "is non-standard and is not on a standards track".
I've added a little more styling to make it more closely match chrome tick box. So its easily interchangeable: - jsfiddle.net/inspiraller/g8mo1nh3/1
One of the downsides here is that you lose the "check" part of "checkbox". It's now just a box that changes color, which is far less clear from a UX/accessibility perspective as to what it is, and what's happening when you click it.
P
Peter Mortensen

I prefer to use icon fonts (such as FontAwesome) since it's easy to modify their colours with CSS, and they scale really well on high pixel-density devices. So here's another pure CSS variant, using similar techniques to those above.

(Below is a static image so you can visualize the result; see the JSFiddle for an interactive version.)

https://i.stack.imgur.com/j6zdx.png

As with other solutions, it uses the label element. An adjacent span holds our checkbox character.

span.bigcheck-target { font-family: FontAwesome; /* Use an icon font for the checkbox */ } input[type='checkbox'].bigcheck { position: relative; left: -999em; /* Hide the real checkbox */ } input[type='checkbox'].bigcheck + span.bigcheck-target:after { content: "\f096"; /* In fontawesome, is an open square (fa-square-o) */ } input[type='checkbox'].bigcheck:checked + span.bigcheck-target:after { content: "\f046"; /* fontawesome checked box (fa-check-square-o) */ } /* ==== Optional - colors and padding to make it look nice === */ body { background-color: #2C3E50; color: #D35400; font-family: sans-serif; font-weight: 500; font-size: 4em; /* Set this to whatever size you want */ } span.bigcheck { display: block; padding: 0.5em; }

Here's the JSFiddle for it.


....what you described is the same as previous answers from Bhushan wagh, Jake, Jonathan Hodgson and Blake ;)
@SW4 I've made reference to that fact, except this answer uses icon fonts (which none of the previous answers had). The first paragraph makes that pretty clear.
You need to replace font-family: FontAwesome; with font-family: 'Font Awesome\ 5 Free';, and update unicode content if you want to make it work in new version.
a
agirault

My solution

input[type="checkbox"] { cursor: pointer; -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; appearance: none; outline: 0; background: lightgray; height: 16px; width: 16px; border: 1px solid white; } input[type="checkbox"]:checked { background: #2aa1c0; } input[type="checkbox"]:hover { filter: brightness(90%); } input[type="checkbox"]:disabled { background: #e6e6e6; opacity: 0.6; pointer-events: none; } input[type="checkbox"]:after { content: ''; position: relative; left: 40%; top: 20%; width: 15%; height: 40%; border: solid #fff; border-width: 0 2px 2px 0; transform: rotate(45deg); display: none; } input[type="checkbox"]:checked:after { display: block; } input[type="checkbox"]:disabled:after { border-color: #7b7b7b; }




If someone could advice why my text is not aligned after, I'd love to know! CSS beginner here.
Checked the entire thread and appearance seems to be key as well as after. Also, if someone need to have a larger checkbox, then this solution will work just fine. Just play around with top, left, width, height and border-width. Works in modern browsers according to caniuse.com. I'm writing this comment in May 2021 for my future self. :)
c
collimarco

You can simply use appearance: none on modern browsers, so that there is no default styling and all your styles are applied properly:

input[type=checkbox] {
  -webkit-appearance: none;
  -moz-appearance: none;
  appearance: none;
  display: inline-block;
  width: 2em;
  height: 2em;
  border: 1px solid gray;
  outline: none;
  vertical-align: middle;
}

input[type=checkbox]:checked {
  background-color: blue;
}

This copies the solution from Joost's answer from 2015.
@TylerH Do you know what copy means? The fact that we both used appearance doesn't mean that the answer is the same. My code is definitely smaller and cleaner and I also add that the solution works on modern browsers.
I do, in fact, know what copy means. Joost's answer suggests using appearance: none as a solution. This answer also suggests using appearance: none as a solution. Since it suggests the same solution, it's a copy. It does not have to be a literal character-for-character facsimile to be a copy. Next time, please read all existing answers before posting your own, to avoid simply repeating information.
P
Peter Mortensen

Here is a simple CSS solution without any jQuery or JavaScript code.

I am using FontAwseome icons but you can use any image

input[type=checkbox] {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: FontAwesome;
  font-style: normal;
  font-weight: normal;
  line-height: 1;
  -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
  -moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale;
  visibility: hidden;
  font-size: 14px;
}

input[type=checkbox]:before {
  content: @fa-var-square-o;
  visibility: visible;
  /*font-size: 12px;*/
}

input[type=checkbox]:checked:before {
  content: @fa-var-check-square-o;
}

Unlike most of the other answers, this one doesn't require creation of additional label or span elements. It just works!
Could you show an example or a demo, or at least the HTML part, with which this CSS code is working? @aWebDeveloper
@aWebDeveloper making inane edits to bump an answer or question to the home page is against the rules.
@aWebDeveloper You edited an old answer on an inactive question, which bumps it to the front page and provides a link straight to your answer. This is fine if you have pertinent info to add or change in an answer. All you did was embed one of your sentences in a quote block, which isn't useful to anyone.
should work @VadimOvchinnikov... nothing here is chrome specific
P
Peter Mortensen

From my googling, this is the easiest way for checkbox styling. Just add :after and :checked:after CSS based on your design.

body{ background: #DDD; } span{ margin-left: 30px; } input[type=checkbox] { cursor: pointer; font-size: 17px; visibility: hidden; position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; transform: scale(1.5); } input[type=checkbox]:after { content: " "; background-color: #fff; display: inline-block; color: #00BFF0; width: 14px; height: 19px; visibility: visible; border: 1px solid #FFF; padding: 0 3px; margin: 2px 0; border-radius: 8px; box-shadow: 0 0 15px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.08), 0 0 2px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.16); } input[type=checkbox]:checked:after { content: "\2714"; display: unset; font-weight: bold; } Select Text


B
Braden Best

Yikes! All these workarounds have led me to the conclusion that the HTML checkbox kind of sucks if you want to style it.

As a forewarning, this isn't a CSS implementation. I just thought I'd share the workaround I came up with in case anyone else might find it useful.

I used the HTML5 canvas element.

The upside to this is that you don't have to use external images and can probably save some bandwidth.

The downside is that if a browser for some reason can't render it correctly, then there's no fallback. Though whether this remains an issue in 2017 is debatable.

Update

I found the old code quite ugly, so I decided to give it a rewrite.

Object.prototype.create = function(args){
    var retobj = Object.create(this);

    retobj.constructor(args || null);

    return retobj;
}

var Checkbox = Object.seal({
    width: 0,
    height: 0,
    state: 0,
    document: null,
    parent: null,
    canvas: null,
    ctx: null,

    /*
     * args:
     * name      default             desc.
     *
     * width     15                  width
     * height    15                  height
     * document  window.document     explicit document reference
     * target    this.document.body  target element to insert checkbox into
     */
    constructor: function(args){
        if(args === null)
            args = {};

        this.width = args.width || 15;
        this.height = args.height || 15;
        this.document = args.document || window.document;
        this.parent = args.target || this.document.body;
        this.canvas = this.document.createElement("canvas");
        this.ctx = this.canvas.getContext('2d');

        this.canvas.width = this.width;
        this.canvas.height = this.height;
        this.canvas.addEventListener("click", this.ev_click(this), false);
        this.parent.appendChild(this.canvas);
        this.draw();
    },

    ev_click: function(self){
        return function(unused){
            self.state = !self.state;
            self.draw();
        }
    },

    draw_rect: function(color, offset){
        this.ctx.fillStyle = color;
        this.ctx.fillRect(offset, offset,
                this.width - offset * 2, this.height - offset * 2);
    },

    draw: function(){
        this.draw_rect("#CCCCCC", 0);
        this.draw_rect("#FFFFFF", 1);

        if(this.is_checked())
            this.draw_rect("#000000", 2);
    },

    is_checked: function(){
        return !!this.state;
    }
});

Here's a working demo.

The new version uses prototypes and differential inheritance to create an efficient system for creating checkboxes. To create a checkbox:

var my_checkbox = Checkbox.create();

This will immediately add the checkbox to the DOM and hook up the events. To query whether a checkbox is checked:

my_checkbox.is_checked(); // True if checked, else false

Also important to note is that I got rid of the loop.

Update 2

Something I neglected to mention in the last update is that using the canvas has more advantages than just making a checkbox that looks however you want it to look. You could also create multi-state checkboxes, if you wanted to.

Object.prototype.create = function(args){
    var retobj = Object.create(this);

    retobj.constructor(args || null);

    return retobj;
}

Object.prototype.extend = function(newobj){
    var oldobj = Object.create(this);

    for(prop in newobj)
        oldobj[prop] = newobj[prop];

    return Object.seal(oldobj);
}

var Checkbox = Object.seal({
    width: 0,
    height: 0,
    state: 0,
    document: null,
    parent: null,
    canvas: null,
    ctx: null,

    /*
     * args:
     * name      default             desc.
     *
     * width     15                  width
     * height    15                  height
     * document  window.document     explicit document reference
     * target    this.document.body  target element to insert checkbox into
     */
    constructor: function(args){
        if(args === null)
            args = {};

        this.width = args.width || 15;
        this.height = args.height || 15;
        this.document = args.document || window.document;
        this.parent = args.target || this.document.body;
        this.canvas = this.document.createElement("canvas");
        this.ctx = this.canvas.getContext('2d');

        this.canvas.width = this.width;
        this.canvas.height = this.height;
        this.canvas.addEventListener("click", this.ev_click(this), false);
        this.parent.appendChild(this.canvas);
        this.draw();
    },

    ev_click: function(self){
        return function(unused){
            self.state = !self.state;
            self.draw();
        }
    },

    draw_rect: function(color, offsetx, offsety){
        this.ctx.fillStyle = color;
        this.ctx.fillRect(offsetx, offsety,
                this.width - offsetx * 2, this.height - offsety * 2);
    },

    draw: function(){
        this.draw_rect("#CCCCCC", 0, 0);
        this.draw_rect("#FFFFFF", 1, 1);
        this.draw_state();
    },

    draw_state: function(){
        if(this.is_checked())
            this.draw_rect("#000000", 2, 2);
    },

    is_checked: function(){
        return this.state == 1;
    }
});

var Checkbox3 = Checkbox.extend({
    ev_click: function(self){
        return function(unused){
            self.state = (self.state + 1) % 3;
            self.draw();
        }
    },

    draw_state: function(){
        if(this.is_checked())
            this.draw_rect("#000000", 2, 2);

        if(this.is_partial())
            this.draw_rect("#000000", 2, (this.height - 2) / 2);
    },

    is_partial: function(){
        return this.state == 2;
    }
});

I modified slightly the Checkbox used in the last snippet so that it is more generic, making it possible to "extend" it with a checkbox that has 3 states. Here's a demo. As you can see, it already has more functionality than the built-in checkbox.

Something to consider when you're choosing between JavaScript and CSS.

Old, poorly-designed code

Working Demo

First, set up a canvas

var canvas = document.createElement('canvas'),
    ctx = canvas.getContext('2d'),
    checked = 0; // The state of the checkbox
canvas.width = canvas.height = 15; // Set the width and height of the canvas
document.body.appendChild(canvas);
document.body.appendChild(document.createTextNode(' Togglable Option'));

Next, devise a way to have the canvas update itself.

(function loop(){
  // Draws a border
  ctx.fillStyle = '#ccc';
  ctx.fillRect(0,0,15,15);
  ctx.fillStyle = '#fff';
  ctx.fillRect(1, 1, 13, 13);
  // Fills in canvas if checked
  if(checked){
    ctx.fillStyle = '#000';
    ctx.fillRect(2, 2, 11, 11);
  }
  setTimeout(loop, 1000/10); // Refresh 10 times per second
})();

The last part is to make it interactive. Luckily, it's pretty simple:

canvas.onclick = function(){
  checked = !checked;
}

This is where you might have problems in IE, due to their weird event handling model in JavaScript.

I hope this helps someone; it definitely suited my needs.


Note that the Canvas implementation, as an emulation of checkboxes, allows for more functionality than built-in checkboxes. For example, fancy stuff like "multi-state" checkboxes (i.e. unchecked (e.g. unchecked -> checked -> "kinda" checked -> unchecked; the states could represent "explicit false", "explicit true", "use default", for example). I'm considering adding an example to the answer.
Terrible idea in my opinion.
@Neil please elaborate
Why reinvent the wheel?
@Neil why not reinvent the wheel? NIH isn't always a bad thing, especially when it affords advantages that would otherwise be impossible or stupidly complicated to implement with the existing tech. So it's a question of whether you're willing to deal with the built-in check boxes. And if I am wanting to theme them to blend with the visual language of my website or app, I want full control. So until someone makes a standalone UI library that's lightweight and easy to use, I personally prefer my wheels to be invented here. Someone else might not, but that doesn't invalidate my answer.
m
maxshuty

Modify the checkbox style with plain CSS. This does not require any JavaScript or HTML manipulation:

.form input[type="checkbox"]:before { display: inline-block; font: normal normal normal 14px/1 FontAwesome; font-size: inherit; text-rendering: auto; -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased; content: "\f096"; opacity: 1 !important; margin-top: -25px; appearance: none; background: #fff; } .form input[type="checkbox"]:checked:before { content: "\f046"; } .form input[type="checkbox"] { font-size: 22px; appearance: none; -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; }


@VadimOvchinnikov We have one solution which requires to following some html structure..stackoverflow.com/questions/23305780/…
k
kakashi senpai

SCSS / SASS Implementation

A more modern approach

For those using SCSS (or easily converted to SASS), the following will be helpful. Effectively, make an element next to the checkbox, which is the one that you will style. When the checkbox is clicked, the CSS restyles the sister element (to your new, checked style). Code is below:

label.checkbox { input[type="checkbox"] { visibility: hidden; display: block; height: 0; width: 0; position: absolute; overflow: hidden; &:checked + span { background: $accent; } } span { cursor: pointer; height: 15px; width: 15px; border: 1px solid $accent; border-radius: 2px; display: inline-block; transition: all 0.2s $interpol; } }


V
Vadim Ovchinnikov

A simple and lightweight template as well:

input[type=checkbox] { cursor: pointer; } input[type=checkbox]:checked:before { content: "\2713"; background: #fffed5; text-shadow: 1px 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, .2); font-size: 20px; text-align: center; line-height: 8px; display: inline-block; width: 13px; height: 15px; color: #00904f; border: 1px solid #cdcdcd; border-radius: 4px; margin: -3px -3px; text-indent: 1px; } input[type=checkbox]:before { content: "\202A"; background: #ffffff; text-shadow: 1px 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, .2); font-size: 20px; text-align: center; line-height: 8px; display: inline-block; width: 13px; height: 15px; color: #00904f; border: 1px solid #cdcdcd; border-radius: 4px; margin: -3px -3px; text-indent: 1px; } checked1
unchecked2


https://jsfiddle.net/rvgccn5b/


Pseudoelements for inputs are supported only in Chrome, your code doesn't work the same in every browser.
P
Peter Mortensen

I think the easiest way to do it is by styling a label and making the checkbox invisible.

HTML

<input type="checkbox" id="first" />
<label for="first">&nbsp;</label>

CSS

checkbox {
  display: none;
}

checkbox + label {
  /* Style for checkbox normal */
  width: 16px;
  height: 16px;
}

checkbox::checked + label,
label.checked {
  /* Style for checkbox checked */
}

The checkbox, even though it is hidden, will still be accessible, and its value will be sent when a form is submitted. For old browsers you might have to change the class of the label to checked using JavaScript because I don't think old versions of Internet Explorer understand ::checked on the checkbox.


The difference between your answer and mine is what exactly?
@BlakePettersson yours is correct, ::checked is just wrong (I even tried just in case it's also allowed) ;)
This is a bad answer. (a) ::checked is wrong—it should be :checked. (b) checkbox is wrong—it should be [type=checkbox]
C
Crashalot

Here's a modern version with a little animation, and simple styling you can customize:

.checkbox {
    position: relative;
    width: 20px;
    height: 20px;
    -webkit-appearance: none;
    -moz-appearance: none;
    -o-appearance: none;
    appearance: none;
    background: transparent;
    border: 2px solid #7C7A7D;
    border-radius: 5px;
    margin: 0;
    outline: none;
    transition: 0.5s ease;
    opacity: 0.8;
    cursor: pointer;
}


.checkbox:checked {
    border-color: #7C7A7D;
    background-color: #7C7A7D;
}


.checkbox:checked:before {
   position: absolute;
   left: 2px;
   top: -4px;
   display: block;
   content: '\2713';
   text-align: center;
   color: #FFF;
   font-family: Arial;
   font-size: 14px;
   font-weight: 800;
}


.checkbox:hover {
   opacity: 1.0;
   transform: scale(1.05);
}

T
TylerH

No JavaScript or jQuery required.

Change your checkbox style simple way.

input[type="checkbox"] { display: none; border: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; } input[type="checkbox"] + label span { background: url(http://imgh.us/uncheck.png); width: 49px; height: 49px; display: inline-block; vertical-align: middle; } input[type="checkbox"]:checked + label span { background: url(http://imgh.us/check_2.png); width: 49px; height: 49px; vertical-align: middle; }

Here is a JSFiddle link


The checkbox isn't showing up, because it relies on external links to image files imgh.us/uncheck.png and imgh.us/check_2.png which are no longer available online.
T
TylerH

Custom checkbox with CSS (WebKit browser solution only Chrome, Safari, Mobile browsers)

<input type="checkbox" id="cardAccptance" name="cardAccptance" value="Yes">
<label for="cardAccptance" class="bold"> Save Card for Future Use</label>

CSS:

    /* The checkbox-cu */
    
    .checkbox-cu {
        display: block;
        position: relative;
        padding-left: 35px;
        margin-bottom: 0;
        cursor: pointer;
        font-size: 16px;
        -webkit-user-select: none;
        -moz-user-select: none;
        -ms-user-select: none;
        user-select: none;
    }
    
    
    /* Hide the browser's default checkbox-cu */
    
    .checkbox-cu input {
        position: absolute;
        opacity: 0;
        cursor: pointer;
        height: 0;
        width: 0;
    }
    
    
    /* Create a custom checkbox-cu */
    
    .checkmark {
        position: absolute;
        top: 4px;
        left: 0;
        height: 20px;
        width: 20px;
        background-color: #eee;
        border: 1px solid #999;
        border-radius: 0;
        box-shadow: none;
    }
    
    
    /* On mouse-over, add a grey background color */
    
    .checkbox-cu:hover input~.checkmark {
        background-color: #ccc;
    }
    
    
    /* When the checkbox-cu is checked, add a blue background */
    
    .checkbox-cu input:checked~.checkmark {
        background-color: transparent;
    }
    
    
    /* Create the checkmark/indicator (hidden when not checked) */
    
    .checkmark:after {
        content: "";
        position: absolute;
        display: none;
    }
    
    
    /* Show the checkmark when checked */
    
    .checkbox-cu input:checked~.checkmark:after {
        display: block;
    }
    
    
    /* Style the checkmark/indicator */
    
    .checkbox-cu .checkmark::after {
        left: 7px;
        top: 3px;
        width: 6px;
        height: 9px;
        border: solid #28a745;
        border-width: 0 2px 2px 0;
        -webkit-transform: rotate(45deg);
        -ms-transform: rotate(45deg);
        transform: rotate(45deg);
        z-index: 100;
    }

T
TylerH

By using Materialize with a custom stylesheet, you can achieve something like this:

CSS code

.custom_checkbox[type="checkbox"]:checked + span:not(.lever)::before {
  border: 2px solid transparent;
  border-bottom: 2px solid #ffd600;
  border-right: 2px solid #ffd600;
  background: transparent;
}

HTML code

<label>
    <input type="checkbox" class="custom_checkbox" />
    <span>Text</span>
</label>

Demo

JSFiddle demo


V
Vadim Ovchinnikov

This is simplest way and you can choose which checkboxes to give this style.

CSS:

.check-box input {
  display: none;
}

.check-box span:before {
  content: ' ';
  width: 20px;
  height: 20px;
  display: inline-block;
  background: url("unchecked.png");
}

.check-box input:checked + span:before {
  background: url("checked.png");
}

HTML:

<label class="check-box">
  <input type="checkbox">
  <span>Check box Text</span>
</label>

P
Peter Mortensen

Here is a CSS/HTML-only version, no jQuery or JavaScript needed at all, Simple and clean HTML and really simple and short CSS.

Here is the JSFiddle

http://jsfiddle.net/v71kn3pr/

Here is the HTML:

<div id="myContainer">
    <input type="checkbox" name="myCheckbox" id="myCheckbox_01_item" value="red" />
    <label for="myCheckbox_01_item" class="box"></label>
    <label for="myCheckbox_01_item" class="text">I accept the Terms of Use.</label>
</div>

Here is the CSS

#myContainer {
    outline: black dashed 1px;
    width: 200px;
}
#myContainer input[type="checkbox"][name="myCheckbox"] {
    display: none;
}
#myContainer input[type="checkbox"][name="myCheckbox"]:not(:checked) + label.box {
    display: inline-block;
    width: 25px;
    height: 25px;
    border: black solid 1px;
    background: #FFF ;
    margin: 5px 5px;
}
#myContainer input[type="checkbox"][name="myCheckbox"]:checked + label.box {
    display: inline-block;
    width: 25px;
    height: 25px;
    border: black solid 1px;
    background: #F00;
    margin: 5px 5px;
}
#myContainer input[type="checkbox"][name="myCheckbox"] + label + label.text {
    font: normal 12px arial;
    display: inline-block;
    line-height: 27px;
    vertical-align: top;
    margin: 5px 0px;
}

This can be adapted to be able to have individual radio or checkboxes, grooups of checkboxes and groups of radio buttons as well.

This html/css, will allow you to also capture click on the label, so the checkbox will be checked and unchecked even if you click just on the label.

This type of checkbox/radio button works perfectly with any form, no problem at all. Have been tested using PHP, ASP.NET (.aspx), JavaServer Faces, and ColdFusion too.


P
Peter Mortensen

Since browsers like Edge and Firefox do not support :before :after on checkbox input tags, here is an alternative purely with HTML and CSS. Of course you should edit CSS according to your requirements.

Make the HTML for checkbox like this:

<div class='custom-checkbox'>
    <input type='checkbox' />
    <label>
        <span></span>
        Checkbox label
    </label>
</div>

Apply this style for the checkbox to change the color label

<style>
    .custom-checkbox {
        position: relative;
    }
    .custom-checkbox input{
        position: absolute;
        left: 0;
        top: 0;
        height:15px;
        width: 50px;    /* Expand the checkbox so that it covers */
        z-index : 1;    /* the label and span, increase z-index to bring it over */
        opacity: 0;     /* the label and set opacity to 0 to hide it. */
    }
    .custom-checkbox input+label {
        position: relative;
        left: 0;
        top: 0;
        padding-left: 25px;
        color: black;
    }
    .custom-checkbox input+label span {
        position: absolute;  /* a small box to display as checkbox */
        left: 0;
        top: 0;
        height: 15px;
        width: 15px;
        border-radius: 2px;
        border: 1px solid black;
        background-color: white;
    }
    .custom-checkbox input:checked+label { /* change label color when checked */
        color: orange;
    }
    .custom-checkbox input:checked+label span{ /* change span box color when checked */
        background-color: orange;
        border: 1px solid orange;
    }
</style>