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How to Add Menu Descriptions in Your WordPress Themes

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WordPress menu system has a built-in feature where you can add descriptions with menu items. However, this feature is hidden by default. Even when enabled, displaying them is not supported without adding some code. Most themes are not designed with menu-item descriptions in mind. In this article we will show you how to enable menu descriptions in WordPress and how to add menu descriptions in your WordPress themes.

How to add menu descriptions in WordPress themes

Note: This tutorial requires you to have fair understanding of HTML, CSS, and WordPress theme development.

When and Why You Would Want to Add Menu Descriptions?

Some users think think that adding menu description will help with the SEO. However, we think that the main reason why you would want to use them is to offer a better user experience on your site.

Descriptions can be used to tell visitors what they will find if they clicked on a menu item. An intriguing description will attract more users to click on menus.

Menu Descriptions

Step 1: Turn on Menu Descriptions

Go to Appearance » Menus. Click on Screen Options button at top right corner of the page. Check the Descriptions box.

Enabling menu descriptions in WordPress

This will enable descriptions field in your menu items. Like this:

Description field added to menu items

Now you can add menu descriptions to items in your WordPress menu. However, these descriptions will not yet appear in your themes. To display menu descriptions we will have to add some code.

Step 2: Add the walker class:

Walker class extends the existing class in WordPress. It basically just adds a line of code to display menu item descriptions. Add this code in your theme’s functions.php file.

class Menu_With_Description extends Walker_Nav_Menu {
	function start_el(&$output, $item, $depth, $args) {
		global $wp_query;
		$indent = ( $depth ) ? str_repeat( "\t", $depth ) : '';
		
		$class_names = $value = '';

		$classes = empty( $item->classes ) ? array() : (array) $item->classes;

		$class_names = join( ' ', apply_filters( 'nav_menu_css_class', array_filter( $classes ), $item ) );
		$class_names = ' class="' . esc_attr( $class_names ) . '"';

		$output .= $indent . '<li id="menu-item-'. $item->ID . '"' . $value . $class_names .'>';

		$attributes = ! empty( $item->attr_title ) ? ' title="' . esc_attr( $item->attr_title ) .'"' : '';
		$attributes .= ! empty( $item->target ) ? ' target="' . esc_attr( $item->target ) .'"' : '';
		$attributes .= ! empty( $item->xfn ) ? ' rel="' . esc_attr( $item->xfn ) .'"' : '';
		$attributes .= ! empty( $item->url ) ? ' href="' . esc_attr( $item->url ) .'"' : '';

		$item_output = $args->before;
		$item_output .= '<a'. $attributes .'>';
		$item_output .= $args->link_before . apply_filters( 'the_title', $item->title, $item->ID ) . $args->link_after;
		$item_output .= '<br /><span class="sub">' . $item->description . '</span>';
		$item_output .= '</a>';
		$item_output .= $args->after;

		$output .= apply_filters( 'walker_nav_menu_start_el', $item_output, $item, $depth, $args );
	}
}

Step 3. Enable Walker in wp_nav_menu

WordPress themes use wp_nav_menu() function to display menus. We have also published a tutorial for beginners about how to add custom navigation menus in WordPress Themes. Most WordPress themes add menus in header.php template. However, it is possible that your theme may have used some other template file to display menus.

What we need to do now is find wp_nav_menu() function in your theme (most likely in header.php) and change it like this.


<?php $walker = new Menu_With_Description; ?>

<?php wp_nav_menu( array( 'theme_location' => 'primary', 'menu_class' => 'nav-menu', 'walker' => $walker ) ); ?>

In the first line we set $walker to use walker class we defined earlier in functions.php. In the second line of code, the only extra argument we need to add to our existing wp_nav_menu arguments is 'walker' => $walker.

Step 4. Styling the Descriptions

The walker class we added earlier displays item descriptions at this line of code:

$item_output .= '<br /><span class="sub">' . $item->description . '</span>';

The above code adds a line break to the menu item by adding a
tag and then wraps your descriptions in a span with class sub. Like this:

<li id="menu-item-99" class="menu-item menu-item-type-post_type menu-item-object-page"><a href="http://www.example.com/about/">About<br /><span class="sub">Who are we?</span></a></li>

To change how your descriptions appear on your site, you can add CSS in your theme’s stylesheet. We were testing this on Twenty Twelve and used this css.

.menu-item {
border-left: 1px solid #ccc;
}

span.sub { 
font-style:italic;
font-size:small;
}

We hope that you will find this article useful and it will help you create cool looking menus with menu descriptions in your theme. Questions? Leave them in comments below.

Additional Resources

How to Style WordPress Navigation Menus

How to Add Custom Items to Specific WordPress Menus

Bill Erickson’s Menus with Description Class

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Reader Interactions

52 CommentsLeave a Reply

  1. Syed Balkhi says

    Hey WPBeginner readers,
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  2. Matthew Blaxton says

    In PHP 8.0 and higher this with throw a critical error.

    You need to find this line:
    function start_el( $output, $item, $depth, $args ) {

    Changing that line to the following should make the error disappear:
    function start_el( &$output, $item, $depth = 0, $args = array(), $id = 0 ) {

  3. kayvan A.Gilani says

    To Add Menu Descriptions in My WordPress Themes, I did step 1 and 2 of this blog but couldn’t follow in step 3 to move forward and perform the total change.

    • WPBeginner Support says

      If you cannot find the function in your theme, we would recommend reaching out to your specific theme’s support and they should be able to assist.

      Admin

  4. yiannis says

    Hi,
    How to disable product category description in max mega menu ?
    I have already gone to Mega Menu > General Settings and set Menu Item Descriptions to disabled but the problem exists.

    • WPBeginner Support says

      You would want to reach out to the plugin’s support and they would be able to assist with the setting not working correctly

      Admin

  5. Anzani Zahrani says

    Hello.. Please Help..
    How to add title category, not using title category description ?

  6. Rahman says

    Great Tip but in menu description it does not support html tags. can anyone know about this?

    Thanks

  7. Iryna says

    Hi Guys,

    Any ideas how to allow html tags in the description?
    remove_filter(‘nav_menu_description’, ‘strip_tags’);
    this one not work for me.

    • Damien Carbery says

      @Iryna: Can you post your code somewhere e.g. pastebin.com.
      Where you call remove_filter() will determine whether it works – it has to be called after the add_filter() call.
      Calling it just before the wp_nav_menu() call might work.

  8. igorasas says

    May already be there ready to plug-in? How this hack will work with the theme of “Twenty TwelveVersion: 1.5”
    ? And just as with the plugin wpml?

  9. Chad says

    Hey man, I added the walker class to functions.php, but I cannot find the wp_nav_menu in genesis theme. What am I missing? I have no idea what to do next?!?!

  10. Ksenia says

    You expain very well – detailed and clearly. 1 minute and menu items descriptions are ok. Thank you!

  11. Mary Anne says

    Thank you so much for this tutorial. It was recommended to me and it worked perfectly for making the changes I wanted to make. However, in making these changes, I’ve lost my drop down sub-item menus. Any idea what affected that in the code change?

    Thank you for your time and tutorial

  12. Paul Renault says

    I have implemented the menu descriptions and it worked great. Now my client is asking for a line break within one of the descriptions. I have tried putting a carriage return and inserting a tag into the description field through the admin. It doesn’t appear in the front end. WP removes these edits. Is there a way to remedy this?

  13. Barry says

    Great tutorial guys, just want to know how to implement this on a custom menu displayed using the Custom Menu widget?

  14. Oryan Consulting says

    Thank you! Been working on WordPress for years and I’ve never even heard of this before. I was looking to remove the descriptions as they were very redundant on the site I’m working on. I looked everywhere for where they were coming from.

    Oh joy!

  15. sambassador says

    works!

    but for php 5.4 you’ll have to match the wp walker arguments for the start_el function:

    function start_el( &$output, $object, $depth = 0, $args = array(), $current_object_id = 0 )

    and find replace $item with $object.

  16. Kevin Gilbert says

    Perfect. This was just what I needed to finish up on a site. I had some issues with the CSS, but I finally figured it out and got it working. Thanks for the great articles.

  17. Pankaj says

    I needed to create same thing and I was totally lost.

    I was planning to do some stupid things to get this thing done.

    thank god I found this post and saved time and stress!

    I simply love this site got to know so much things.

    Thanks you so much for showing the easiest things here.

    • Pankaj says

      The span tag is coming on sub-menus too.

      its not showing there but it is taking that much of space which makes it look too odd.

      is there any workaround for the same??

  18. DiTesco says

    This is really a great tutorial and I was wondering if this would work on the Thesis 1.8.5? If not, it would be great if you can provide one. I will most certainly help you put it out there. Thumbs up!

  19. svet says

    I followed your tutorial and added description to my menu. Thanks! However, when I am in mobile mode menu converts into dropdown menu and menu title and description are connected. For example, if my menu item is “about” and description “more about me”, the mobile version shows “aboutmore about me”. Is there a way to fix this?

    • David says

      I had the same problem. Here’s what I did.

      I changed this:
      $description = ! empty( $item->description ) ? ‘<span>’.esc_attr( $item->description ).'</span>’ : ”;

      To this:
      $description = ! empty( $item->description ) ? ‘<br /><span>’.esc_attr( $item->description ).'</span>’ : ”;

      Not sure if it’s the best solution, but it worked for me.

      • Garrett Hyder says

        Thanks guys, I ran into what SVET and DAVID did with the mobile menu.
        The code seems to have changed my change was simply appending in a span with the dash seperator and in my desktop query simply suppressed it as was unneeded there.

        $item_output .= ‘ – ‘;

        Within my Desktop Only Query set the span to display none;
        @media only screen and (min-width: 740px) {
        header #submenu li span.dash { display:none; }

        Hope that helps, handled my issue nicely.

  20. Samedi Amba says

    Thanks for the Great Tutorial. I’ve done the major steps well, as you can see from
    http://ueab.ac.ke/demo/index

    I was stuck with the styling-how do I reduce the space between the Main Menu Label and the description? Your help is greatly appreciated.

  21. Chris Rouse says

    Great post. I’ve tried to dig into this before but the previous instructions I found were not this easy to follow. I was able to drop the functions.php code in, figure out how to change the walker class in my header file (different for the theme I use, but straight forward), and get things going in about 15 minutes from start to finish.

    One piece that you might want to add is how to include the right border on the last menu item using the :last-child property.


    .menu-item:last-child {
    border-right: 1px solid #ccc;
    }

  22. Damien Carbery says

    Instead of extending Walker_Nav_Menu it would be nice (and easier) if a filter was provided e.g.
    If the core code had:
    $item_output .= apply_filters( ‘walker_nav_menu_description’, $item->description);

    Then the custom filter function would just have:
    return ” . $description . ”;

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