:universal-selector
selector or pseudo-class · 10 supported, 2 partial, 2 unsupported across 15 clients
The universal selector (*) matches every element. It is occasionally used in email for a single global rule like setting box-sizing: border-box, but its specificity is extremely low and Outlook ignores it because <style> blocks are stripped. In practice, the universal selector is a niche progressive enhancement.
Client Support
| Client | Category | Engine | Support |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gmail | webmail | Gmail Web | Supported |
| Gmail Android | mobile | Gmail Mobile | Partial |
| Gmail iOS | mobile | Gmail Mobile | Partial |
| Outlook 365 | webmail | Outlook Web | Supported |
| Outlook (New) | desktop | Outlook Web | Unsupported |
| Outlook Classic | desktop | Microsoft Word | Unsupported |
| Outlook iOS | mobile | Outlook Mobile | Supported |
| Outlook Android | mobile | Outlook Mobile | Supported |
| Apple Mail | desktop | WebKit | Supported |
| Apple Mail iOS | mobile | WebKit | Supported |
| Yahoo Mail | webmail | Yahoo | Supported |
| Samsung Mail | mobile | Samsung | Supported |
| Thunderbird | desktop | Gecko | Supported |
| HEY Mail | webmail | WebKit | Supported |
| Superhuman | desktop | Blink | Unknown |
Client-by-client behaviour for :universal-selector
Fully supports :universal-selector (10): Gmail, Outlook 365, Outlook iOS, Outlook Android, Apple Mail, Apple Mail iOS, Yahoo Mail, Samsung Mail, Thunderbird, HEY Mail.
Partial support (2): Gmail Android, Gmail iOS. Expect rendering quirks unique to each engine — partial support typically means a subset of values, an ignored shorthand, or sanitizer-specific rewrites.
No support (2): Outlook (New), Outlook Classic. Plan fallbacks for these clients before relying on :universal-selector in production sends.
Behaviour unverified in: Superhuman.
When to use :universal-selector in email
- Setting box-sizing: border-box across all elements in modern clients.
- Resetting margin and padding globally as the start of a custom design system.
- Applying a single dark-mode color override to every element via *.
Rendering behaviour and edge cases
- Specificity is the lowest possible — any other selector overrides *.
- Outlook on Windows ignores * because <style> is stripped.
- Universal selectors can have measurable rendering cost on slow clients with large emails.
Recommended fallback strategy
Avoid relying on * for production emails. If you need a global reset, apply explicit inline styles on each element instead. Reserve the universal selector for niche progressive-enhancement cases in modern clients only.
Fixes & Workarounds
Outlook (New)
Unsupported":universal-selector" is not supported in this email client.
Outlook Classic
Unsupported":universal-selector" is not supported in this email client.
Gmail Android
Partial":universal-selector" is not supported in this email client.
Gmail iOS
Partial":universal-selector" is not supported in this email client.
Related Features
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Try Emailens FreeSupport data last updated Apr 27, 2026 · synced from caniemail.com via @emailens/engine.