Future versions of the Firefox browser will support a feature that stabilizes the browser window and blocks the annoying page jumps that occur when images and ads are loaded at the top of the page and pushes the content currently viewed down and out of view. The feature is known as “scroll anchoring” and is described in a web standard still in the works of the official web standards body, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Changes in [page] DOM elements above the visible area of the scrolling box can lead to the movement of the page while the user consumes the content. This spec proposes a mechanism to mitigate this jarring user experience by tracking the anchor node position and adjusting the offset scroll accordingly. Google Chrome is the first browser that adds scroll anchoring support and the dev team that pioneered the API work. Work on adding scroll anchoring to Chrome began in March 2016, after users complained a year earlier about the issue and the Chrome 56 feature was released in January 2017. One month later, Opera Software added support with the release of Opera 43, while Baidu Browser followed in April of that year. Edge, Safari and Internet Explorer never provided scroll anchoring support. Now, almost two years after Chrome’s original efforts to stabilize the page loading experience by removing unnecessary scroll position yanks, Firefox is finally added to the feature. According to a tweet published today by Mozilla developers, work on adding scroll anchoring support in Firefox has finally been completed after initial efforts began in September 2016.
— Firefox Nightly (@FirefoxNightly) January 14, 2019 The current version of Firefox Nightly released today supports scroll anchoring and is expected to be released in March 2019 with the official release of the stable Firefox 66 branch.