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Home/ Questions/Q 544119
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T10:37:15+00:00 2026-05-13T10:37:15+00:00

I’d like to store a JavaScript object in HTML5 localStorage , but my object

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I’d like to store a JavaScript object in HTML5 localStorage, but my object is apparently being converted to a string.

I can store and retrieve primitive JavaScript types and arrays using localStorage, but objects don’t seem to work. Should they?

Here’s my code:

var testObject = { 'one': 1, 'two': 2, 'three': 3 };
console.log('typeof testObject: ' + typeof testObject);
console.log('testObject properties:');
for (var prop in testObject) {
    console.log('  ' + prop + ': ' + testObject[prop]);
}

// Put the object into storage
localStorage.setItem('testObject', testObject);

// Retrieve the object from storage
var retrievedObject = localStorage.getItem('testObject');

console.log('typeof retrievedObject: ' + typeof retrievedObject);
console.log('Value of retrievedObject: ' + retrievedObject);

The console output is

typeof testObject: object
testObject properties:
  one: 1
  two: 2
  three: 3
typeof retrievedObject: string
Value of retrievedObject: [object Object]

It looks to me like the setItem method is converting the input to a string before storing it.

I see this behavior in Safari, Chrome, and Firefox, so I assume it’s my misunderstanding of the HTML5 Web Storage specification, not a browser-specific bug or limitation.

I’ve tried to make sense of the structured clone algorithm described in 2 Common infrastructure. I don’t fully understand what it’s saying, but maybe my problem has to do with my object’s properties not being enumerable (???).

Is there an easy workaround?


Update: The W3C eventually changed their minds about the structured-clone specification, and decided to change the spec to match the implementations. See 12111 – spec for Storage object getItem(key) method does not match implementation behavior. So this question is no longer 100% valid, but the answers still may be of interest.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T10:37:16+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:37 am

    Looking at the Apple, Mozilla and Mozilla again documentation, the functionality seems to be limited to handle only string key/value pairs.

    A workaround can be to stringify your object before storing it, and later parse it when you retrieve it:

    var testObject = { 'one': 1, 'two': 2, 'three': 3 };
    
    // Put the object into storage
    localStorage.setItem('testObject', JSON.stringify(testObject));
    
    // Retrieve the object from storage
    var retrievedObject = localStorage.getItem('testObject');
    
    console.log('retrievedObject: ', JSON.parse(retrievedObject));
    
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