Best HTML Editors for Visual Studio Code

Compare the Top HTML Editors that integrate with Visual Studio Code as of June 2025

This a list of HTML Editors that integrate with Visual Studio Code. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with Visual Studio Code. View the products that work with Visual Studio Code in the table below.

What are HTML Editors for Visual Studio Code?

HTML editors are software tools used to create and edit HTML (HyperText Markup Language) code, which is the standard language used to build and design webpages. These editors provide a user-friendly interface for writing, editing, and previewing HTML code, often with features like syntax highlighting, code auto-completion, and real-time previews. Some HTML editors also include tools for CSS and JavaScript integration, making it easier for developers to build complete web pages with styles and interactive elements. HTML editors are widely used by web developers, designers, and content creators to streamline the web development process. Compare and read user reviews of the best HTML Editors for Visual Studio Code currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    Atom

    Atom

    GitHub

    Atom is a hackable text editor for the 21st century, built on Electron, and based on everything we love about our favorite editors. We designed it to be deeply customizable, but still approachable using the default configuration. A text editor is at the core of a developer’s toolbox, but it doesn't usually work alone. Work with Git and GitHub directly from Atom with the GitHub package. Create new branches, stage and commit, push and pull, resolve merge conflicts, view pull requests and more—all from within your editor. The GitHub package is already bundled with Atom, so you're ready to go! Atom works across operating systems. Use it on OS X, Windows, or Linux. Search for and install new packages or create your own right from Atom. Atom helps you write code faster with a smart and flexible autocomplete. Easily browse and open a single file, a whole project, or multiple projects in one window.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    Tips.io

    Tips.io

    Tips.io

    Our editor is based on VS Code so you'll feel right at home. It has Tailwind class autocomplete. It even knows your custom shortcuts and custom Tailwind config. It's kind of like Claude's AI code to preview the generator. Except Tailwind focused, a bunch of cool features, and you can pick individual pieces of the page to update. It doesn't matter if you are a Tailwind genius or have never seen it before in your life. We deeply integrate to make editing feel like tweaking a configuration. Out of the box, Tips.io supports the world's best Tailwind animation library. Easily combine presets or create custom animations to enhance your website's interactivity and visual appeal. Scaffold out entire websites at ludicrous speeds. The perfect tool for starting fresh or even wireframing out a website. Just grab from our big list of free themes and components. You can't forget the small things. Out of the box you'll get some extra peace of mind with zero setup.
    Starting Price: $15 per month
  • 3
    VSCodium

    VSCodium

    VSCodium

    Microsoft’s vscode source code is open source (MIT-licensed), but the product available for download (Visual Studio Code) is licensed under this not-FLOSS license and contains telemetry/tracking. The VSCodium project exists so that you don’t have to download+build from source. This project includes special build scripts that clone Microsoft’s vscode repo, run the build commands, and upload the resulting binaries for you to GitHub releases. These binaries are licensed under the MIT license. Telemetry is disabled. Note for Mac OS X Mojave users, if you see “App can’t be opened because Apple cannot check it for malicious software” when opening VSCodium the first time, you can right-click the application and choose Open. This should only be required the first time opening on Mojave. The most up-to-date information on migrating from Visual Studio Code and other quirks you might encounter are documented.
  • 4
    Codespaces
    Use the full power of Visual Studio Code, including the editor, terminal, debugger, version control, settings sync, and the entire ecosystem of extensions. Work in the browser or hand off to your desktop. Spin up new dev environment for any sized project in seconds with prebuilt images. GitHub’s own 35GB dev image starts in under 10 seconds. Scale your cloud VMs up to 32 cores and 64GB of RAM. And with low-latency connections across four regions, you won’t even remember it’s not your local machine. Preview your changes in the browser with instant reloads (websocket and HMR support) and share private and public ports with your teammates. Every nerdy detail only you care about, configured just right, backed by your own dotfiles repository.
    Starting Price: $4 per user per month
  • 5
    CotEditor

    CotEditor

    CotEditor

    CotEditor is exactly made for macOS. It looks and behaves just as macOS applications should. CotEditor launches so quick that you can write your text immediately when you want to. CotEditor is developed as an open-source project that allows anyone to contribute. Colorize more than 50 pre-installed major languages like HTML, PHP, Python, Ruby or Markdown. You can also create your own settings. Split a window into multiple panes to see different parts of your document at the same time. Inspect Unicode character data of each selected character in your document and display them in a popover. There are no complex configuration files that require geek knowledge. You can access all your settings including syntax definitions and themes from a standard preferences window. You don't need to lose your unsaved data anymore. CotEditor backups your documents automatically while editing. Check and list-up the characters in your document that cannot convert into the desired encoding.
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