Prevent users from submitting a form by hitting Enter

You can use a method such as

$(document).ready(function() {
  $(window).keydown(function(event){
    if(event.keyCode == 13) {
      event.preventDefault();
      return false;
    }
  });
});

In reading the comments on the original post, to make it more usable and allow people to press Enter if they have completed all the fields:

function validationFunction() {
  $('input').each(function() {
    ...

  }
  if(good) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

$(document).ready(function() {
  $(window).keydown(function(event){
    if( (event.keyCode == 13) && (validationFunction() == false) ) {
      event.preventDefault();
      return false;
    }
  });
});

Disallow enter key anywhere

If you don't have a <textarea> in your form, then just add the following to your <form>:

<form ... onkeydown="return event.key != 'Enter';">

Or with jQuery:

$(document).on("keydown", "form", function(event) { 
    return event.key != "Enter";
});

This will cause that every key press inside the form will be checked on the key. If it is not Enter, then it will return true and anything continue as usual. If it is Enter, then it will return false and anything will stop immediately, so the form won't be submitted.

The keydown event is preferred over keyup as the keyup is too late to block form submit. Historically there was also the keypress, but this is deprecated, as is the KeyboardEvent.keyCode. You should use KeyboardEvent.key instead which returns the name of the key being pressed. When Enter is checked, then this would check 13 (normal enter) as well as 108 (numpad enter).

Note that $(window) as suggested in some other answers instead of $(document) doesn't work for keydown/keyup in IE<=8, so that's not a good choice if you're like to cover those poor users as well.

Allow enter key on textareas only

If you have a <textarea> in your form (which of course should accept the Enter key), then add the keydown handler to every individual input element which isn't a <textarea>.

<input ... onkeydown="return event.key != 'Enter';">
<select ... onkeydown="return event.key != 'Enter';">
...

To reduce boilerplate, this is better to be done with jQuery:

$(document).on("keydown", ":input:not(textarea)", function(event) {
    return event.key != "Enter";
});

If you have other event handler functions attached on those input elements, which you'd also like to invoke on enter key for some reason, then only prevent event's default behavior instead of returning false, so it can properly propagate to other handlers.

$(document).on("keydown", ":input:not(textarea)", function(event) {
    if (event.key == "Enter") {
        event.preventDefault();
    }
});

Allow enter key on textareas and submit buttons only

If you'd like to allow enter key on submit buttons <input|button type="submit"> too, then you can always refine the selector as below.

$(document).on("keydown", ":input:not(textarea):not(:submit)", function(event) {
    // ...
});

Note that input[type=text] as suggested in some other answers doesn't cover those HTML5 non-text inputs, so that's not a good selector.


Section 4.10.22.2 Implicit submission of the W3C HTML5 spec says:

A form element's default button is the first submit button in tree order whose form owner is that form element.

If the user agent supports letting the user submit a form implicitly (for example, on some platforms hitting the "enter" key while a text field is focused implicitly submits the form), then doing so for a form whose default button has a defined activation behavior must cause the user agent to run synthetic click activation steps on that default button.

Note: Consequently, if the default button is disabled, the form is not submitted when such an implicit submission mechanism is used. (A button has no activation behavior when disabled.)

Therefore, a standards-compliant way to disable any implicit submission of the form is to place a disabled submit button as the first submit button in the form:

<form action="...">
  <!-- Prevent implicit submission of the form -->
  <button type="submit" disabled style="display: none" aria-hidden="true"></button>

  <!-- ... -->

  <button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>

One nice feature of this approach is that it works without JavaScript; whether or not JavaScript is enabled, a standards-conforming web browser is required to prevent implicit form submission.


I had to catch all three events related to pressing keys in order to prevent the form from being submitted:

    var preventSubmit = function(event) {
        if(event.keyCode == 13) {
            console.log("caught ya!");
            event.preventDefault();
            //event.stopPropagation();
            return false;
        }
    }
    $("#search").keypress(preventSubmit);
    $("#search").keydown(preventSubmit);
    $("#search").keyup(preventSubmit);

You can combine all the above into a nice compact version:

    $('#search').bind('keypress keydown keyup', function(e){
       if(e.keyCode == 13) { e.preventDefault(); }
    });

If you use a script to do the actual submit, then you can add "return false" line to the onsubmit handler like this:

<form onsubmit="return false;">

Calling submit() on the form from JavaScript will not trigger the event.