How exactly does <script defer="defer"> work?

The real answer is: Because you cannot trust defer.

In concept, defer and async differ as follows:

async allows the script to be downloaded in the background without blocking. Then, the moment it finishes downloading, rendering is blocked and that script executes. Render resumes when the script has executed.

defer does the same thing, except claims to guarantee that scripts execute in the order they were specified on the page, and that they will be executed after the document has finished parsing. So, some scripts may finish downloading then sit and wait for scripts that downloaded later but appeared before them.

Unfortunately, due to what is really a standards cat fight, defer's definition varies spec to spec, and even in the most recent specs doesn't offer a useful guarantee. As answers here and this issue demonstrate, browsers implement defer differently:

  • In certain situations some browsers have a bug that causes defer scripts to run out of order.
  • Some browsers delay the DOMContentLoaded event until after the defer scripts have loaded, and some don't.
  • Some browsers obey defer on <script> elements with inline code and without a src attribute, and some ignore it.

Fortunately the spec does at least specify that async overrides defer. So you can treat all scripts as async and get a wide swath of browser support like so:

<script defer async src="..."></script>

98% of browsers in use worldwide and 99% in the US will avoid blocking with this approach.

(If you need to wait until the document has finished parsing, listen to the event DOMContentLoaded event or use jQuery's handy .ready() function. You'd want to do this anyway to fall back gracefully on browsers that don't implement defer at all.)


A few snippets from the HTML5 spec: http://w3c.github.io/html/semantics-scripting.html#element-attrdef-script-async

The defer and async attributes must not be specified if the src attribute is not present.


There are three possible modes that can be selected using these attributes [async and defer]. If the async attribute is present, then the script will be executed asynchronously, as soon as it is available. If the async attribute is not present but the defer attribute is present, then the script is executed when the page has finished parsing. If neither attribute is present, then the script is fetched and executed immediately, before the user agent continues parsing the page.


The exact processing details for these attributes are, for mostly historical reasons, somewhat non-trivial, involving a number of aspects of HTML. The implementation requirements are therefore by necessity scattered throughout the specification. The algorithms below (in this section) describe the core of this processing, but these algorithms reference and are referenced by the parsing rules for script start and end tags in HTML, in foreign content, and in XML, the rules for the document.write() method, the handling of scripting, etc.


If the element has a src attribute, and the element has a defer attribute, and the element has been flagged as "parser-inserted", and the element does not have an async attribute:

The element must be added to the end of the list of scripts that will execute when the document has finished parsing associated with the Document of the parser that created the element.