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      This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since November 2015.
The initial CSS keyword applies the initial (or default) value of a property to an element. It can be applied to any CSS property, including the CSS shorthand property all. With all set to initial, all CSS properties can be restored to their respective initial values in one go instead of restoring each one separately.
On inherited properties, the initial value may be unexpected. You should consider using the inherit, unset, revert, or revert-layer keywords instead.
Examples
>Using initial to reset color for an element
HTML
<p>
  <span>This text is red.</span>
  <em>This text is in the initial color (typically black).</em>
  <span>This is red again.</span>
</p>
CSS
p {
  color: red;
}
em {
  color: initial;
}
Result
With the initial keyword in this example, color value on the em element is restored to the initial value of color, as defined in the specification.
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| CSS Cascading and Inheritance Level 4> # initial> | 
Browser compatibility
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See also
- Use the inheritkeyword to make an element's property the same as its parent.
- Use the revertkeyword to reset a property to the value established by the user-agent stylesheet (or by user styles, if any exist).
- Use the revert-layerkeyword to reset a property to the value established in a previous cascade layer.
- Use the unsetkeyword to set a property to its inherited value if it inherits or to its initial value if not.
- The allproperty lets you reset all properties to their initial, inherited, reverted, or unset state at once.