Escape HTML characters: escape
The escape filter converts HTML special characters (&, <, >, ", ') into their HTML entity equivalents so they are displayed as literal text instead of being interpreted as HTML. This filter is also available under the alias e.
This is important when displaying user-provided or dynamic text in contexts where HTML is rendered, such as Markdown cards or notification messages. For example, if a sensorSensors return information about a thing, for instance the level of water in a tank. [Learn more] state contains characters like < or &, escaping ensures they appear correctly instead of being treated as HTML markup.
Usage
Here’s how to use this template function. Copy any example and adjust it to your setup.
{{ "<b>Hello</b> & welcome" | escape }}
<b>Hello</b> & welcome
Function signature
The signature is a technical summary of this template function. It shows the name of the function, the values (called parameters) it accepts, and what type of data each parameter expects (for example, a piece of text or a number).
Function parameters that have a = with a value after them are optional. If you leave them out, the default value shown is used automatically. Function parameters without a default are required.
escape(
value: str,
) -> str
Function parameters
The following parameters can be provided to this function.
Using the e alias
The escape filter can also be used with its shorter alias e.
{{ "Tom & Jerry" | e }}
Tom & Jerry
Good to know
- Only the five HTML-special characters are replaced. Other characters like accented letters or emoji pass through unchanged.
- The result is marked as safe HTML, so a later
safeor escape call will not double-escape it.
Try it yourself
Ready to test this? Open Developer tools > Template, paste the example into the Template editor, and watch the result update on the right. Edit the values to see how the function adapts to your own entitiesAn entity represents a sensor, actor, or function in Home Assistant. Entities are used to monitor physical properties or to control other entities. An entity is usually part of a device or a service. [Learn more].
More examples
Real scenarios where this function comes up in automations and templates. Copy any example and adapt it to your setup.
Safely display a sensor value containing special characters
Escape a sensor state so that any special characters are rendered literally in a Markdown card.
{{ states("sensor.device_status") | escape }}
Running <OK>
Escape dynamic content in a notification
Ensure that user-provided text does not break HTML formatting in a notification message.
The device reported: {{ states("sensor.error_message") | escape }}
The device reported: Error code <5> & retry
Still stuck?
The Home Assistant community is quick to help: join Discord for real-time chat, post on the community forum with your template and expected result, or share on our subreddit /r/homeassistant.
AI assistants like ChatGPT or Claude can also explain or fix templates when you describe what you want in plain language.
Related template functions
These functions work well alongside this one:
-
Force-escape HTML characters: forceescape - Escapes HTML special characters, even on strings already marked as safe.
-
Mark as safe HTML: safe - Marks a string as safe HTML so it will not be escaped when rendered.
-
Strip HTML tags: striptags - Removes all HTML/XML tags from a string, leaving only the text content.