You’ve probably heard that everything important needs to go “above the fold”—but in modern web design, that advice oversimplifies how users actually browse. Here’s what still matters (and what doesn’t).
For years, web designers and marketers have stressed the importance of keeping key content “above the fold”—the portion of a web page visible before you scroll. The logic? Users won’t scroll, so you better grab them fast.
But today, that idea is only partly true.
Yes—but not in the way it used to be.
Modern users do scroll. In fact, they expect to. But that doesn’t mean the top of your page doesn’t matter. It still sets the tone and decides whether people want to keep going.
It comes down to first impressions. The analogy we always use is it's like the first impression a person gets when walking into a new restaurant—if that initial reaction is not a good one, they might decide to turn around and leave. The same is true with your website, if it is overly cluttered and sets a bad first impression.
On mobile, screen sizes vary wildly—and “the fold” becomes a moving target. That’s why smart design focuses on flow, not arbitrary screen limits. Good UX guides the user naturally through the page, no matter the device.
“Above the fold” isn’t dead—but it’s not a hard rule, either. It’s a starting point. Your job is to earn the scroll, not fear the loss of attention.
Want help designing pages that keep users engaged top to bottom? That’s our thing. Contact us today to get started.