On the standards track: Yes
Is Experimental: No
Is Deprecated: No
In Chrome version 17 on 2012-02-08 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In Chrome Android version 18 on 2012-06-27 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In Edge version 79 on 2020-01-15 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
Not in Firefox
Not in Firefox for Android
Not in Internet Explorer
In Quest Browser version 5.0 on undefined Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In Opera version 15 on 2013-07-02 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In Opera Android version 14 on 2013-05-21 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In Safari version 10 on 2016-09-20 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only.
In Safari on iOS version 9.3 on 2016-03-21 Note: Support for the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only.
In Samsung Internet version 1.0 on 2013-04-27 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In WebView Android version 4.4 on 2013-12-09 Note: Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. See bug 40470742 for supporting the unprefixed cross-fade() function.
In WebView on iOS version 9.3 on 2016-03-21 Note: Support for the original dual-image with percentage implementation only. Supports the original dual-image with percentage implementation only.