MHTML, an initialism of MIME encapsulation of aggregate HTML documents, is a web page archive format used to combine, in a single computer file, the HTML code and its companion resources that are represented by external hyperlinks in the web page's HTML code. The content of an MHTML file is encoded using the same techniques that were first developed for HTML email messages, using the MIME content typemultipart/related. MHTML files use a .mhtml or .mhtfilename extension. The first part of the file is an e-mail header. The second part is normally HTML code. Subsequent parts are additional resources identified by their original uniform resource locators and encoded in base64binary-to-text encoding. MHTML was proposed as an open standard, then circulated in a revised edition in 1999 as RFC 2557. The.mhtml and.eml filename extensions are interchangeable: either filename extension can be changed from one to the other. An.eml message can be sent by e-mail, and it can be displayed by an email client. An email message can be saved using a.mhtml or.mht filename extension and then opened for display in a web browser or for editing other programs, including word processors and text editors.
Browser support
Some browsers support the MHTML format, either directly or through third-party extensions, but the process for saving a web page along with its resources as an MHTML file is not standardized. Due to this, a web page saved as an MHTML file using one browser may render differently on another.
Internet Explorer
As of version 5.0, IE was the first browser to support reading and saving web pages and external resources to a single MHTML file.
Support for saving web pages as MHTML files was made available in the Opera 9.0 web browser. From Opera 9.50 through the rest of the Presto-based Opera product line, the default format for saving pages is MHTML. The initial release of the new Webkit/Blink-based Opera did not support MHTML, but subsequent releases do. MHTML can be enabled by typing "opera://flags#save-page-as-mhtml" at the address bar.
Creating MHTML files in Google Chrome is supported by toggling the experimental "Save Page as MHTML" option by visiting the link "chrome://flags/#save-page-as-mhtml" since version 25.0 and an API for browser extension since version 35.0.
Vivaldi
Similarly to Google Chrome, the Chromium-based Vivaldi browser can save webpages as MHTML files since the 2.3 release. It supports both reading and writing MHTML files by toggling the "vivaldi://flags/#save-page-as-mhtml" option.
Firefox
does not support MHTML. Until the advent of version 57, MHT files could be read and written by installing a browser extension, such as or .
From version 3.1.1 onwards, Apple Inc.'s Safari web browser still does not natively support the MHTML format. Instead, Safari supports the webarchive format, and the macOS version includes a print-to-PDF feature. As with most other modern web browsers, support for MHTML files can be added to Safari via various third-party extensions.
As of version 3.5.7, KDE's Konqueror web browser does not support MHTML files. An extension project, , can be used to allow saving and viewing of MHTML files.
ACCESS NetFront
3.4 can view and save MHTML files.
Pale Moon
requires an extension to be installed to read and write MHT files. One extension is freely available, , a fork of Mozilla Archive Format extension.
GNOME Web
added support for read and save web pages in MHTML since version 3.14.1 released in September 2014.
MHT viewers
There are commercial software products for viewing MHTML files and converting them to other formats, such as PDF and ePub. Some HTML editor programs can view and edit MHTML files.
The "Save to Google Drive" extension for Google Chrome can save as MHTML as one of its outputs.
Microsoft OneNote
, starting with OneNote 2010, emails individual pages as.mht files.
Evernote
for Windows can export notes as MHT format, as an alternative to HTML or its own native.enex format.
Exploits
In May 2015, a researcher noted that attackers could build malicious documents by creating an MHT file, appending an MSO object at the end, and renaming the resulting file with a.doc extension. The delivery method would be by spam emails. In April 2019, a security researcher published details about an XML eXternal Entity vulnerability that could be exploited when a user opens an MHT file. Since the Windows operating system is set to automatically open all MHT files, by default, in Internet Explorer, the exploit could be triggered when a user double-clicked on a file that they received via email, instant messaging, or another vector, including a different browser.