| --- |
| title: How to set up Jest with Next.js |
| nav_title: Jest |
| description: Learn how to set up Jest with Next.js for Unit Testing and Snapshot Testing. |
| --- |
|
|
| {} |
|
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| Jest and React Testing Library are frequently used together for **Unit Testing** and **Snapshot Testing**. This guide will show you how to set up Jest with Next.js and write your first tests. |
|
|
| > **Good to know:** Since `async` Server Components are new to the React ecosystem, Jest currently does not support them. While you can still run **unit tests** for synchronous Server and Client Components, we recommend using an **E2E tests** for `async` components. |
|
|
| ## Quickstart |
|
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| You can use `create-next-app` with the Next.js [with-jest](https: |
|
|
| ```bash filename="Terminal" |
| npx create-next-app@latest --example with-jest with-jest-app |
| ``` |
|
|
| ## Manual setup |
|
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| Since the release of [Next.js 12](https: |
|
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| To set up Jest, install `jest` and the following packages as dev dependencies: |
|
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| ```bash filename="Terminal" |
| npm install -D jest jest-environment-jsdom @testing-library/react @testing-library/dom @testing-library/jest-dom ts-node @types/jest |
| # or |
| yarn add -D jest jest-environment-jsdom @testing-library/react @testing-library/dom @testing-library/jest-dom ts-node @types/jest |
| # or |
| pnpm install -D jest jest-environment-jsdom @testing-library/react @testing-library/dom @testing-library/jest-dom ts-node @types/jest |
| ``` |
|
|
| Generate a basic Jest configuration file by running the following command: |
|
|
| ```bash filename="Terminal" |
| npm init jest@latest |
| # or |
| yarn create jest@latest |
| # or |
| pnpm create jest@latest |
| ``` |
|
|
| This will take you through a series of prompts to setup Jest for your project, including automatically creating a `jest.config.ts|js` file. |
|
|
| Update your config file to use `next/jest`. This transformer has all the necessary configuration options for Jest to work with Next.js: |
|
|
| ```ts filename="jest.config.ts" switcher |
| import type { Config } from 'jest' |
| import nextJest from 'next/jest.js' |
|
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| const createJestConfig = nextJest({ |
| |
| dir: './', |
| }) |
|
|
| |
| const config: Config = { |
| coverageProvider: 'v8', |
| testEnvironment: 'jsdom', |
| |
| |
| } |
|
|
| |
| export default createJestConfig(config) |
| ``` |
|
|
| ```js filename="jest.config.js" switcher |
| const nextJest = require('next/jest') |
|
|
| |
| const createJestConfig = nextJest({ |
| |
| dir: './', |
| }) |
|
|
| |
| const config = { |
| coverageProvider: 'v8', |
| testEnvironment: 'jsdom', |
| |
| |
| } |
|
|
| |
| module.exports = createJestConfig(config) |
| ``` |
|
|
| Under the hood, `next/jest` is automatically configuring Jest for you, including: |
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| - Setting up `transform` using the [Next.js Compiler](/docs/architecture/nextjs-compiler). |
| - Auto mocking stylesheets (`.css`, `.module.css`, and their scss variants), image imports and [`next/font`](/docs/app/api-reference/components/font). |
| - Loading `.env` (and all variants) into `process.env`. |
| - Ignoring `node_modules` from test resolving and transforms. |
| - Ignoring `.next` from test resolving. |
| - Loading `next.config.js` for flags that enable SWC transforms. |
|
|
| > **Good to know**: To test environment variables directly, load them manually in a separate setup script or in your `jest.config.ts` file. For more information, please see [Test Environment Variables](/docs/app/guides/environment-variables#test-environment-variables). |
|
|
| <PagesOnly> |
|
|
| ## Setting up Jest (with Babel) |
|
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| If you opt out of the [Next.js Compiler](/docs/architecture/nextjs-compiler) and use Babel instead, you will need to manually configure Jest and install `babel-jest` and `identity-obj-proxy` in addition to the packages above. |
|
|
| Here are the recommended options to configure Jest for Next.js: |
|
|
| ```js filename="jest.config.js" |
| module.exports = { |
| collectCoverage: true, |
| |
| coverageProvider: 'v8', |
| collectCoverageFrom: [ |
| '**/*.{js,jsx,ts,tsx}', |
| '!**/*.d.ts', |
| '!**/node_modules/**', |
| '!<rootDir>/out/**', |
| '!<rootDir>/.next/**', |
| '!<rootDir>/*.config.js', |
| '!<rootDir>/coverage/**', |
| ], |
| moduleNameMapper: { |
| |
| |
| '^.+\\.module\\.(css|sass|scss)$': 'identity-obj-proxy', |
|
|
| |
| '^.+\\.(css|sass|scss)$': '<rootDir>/__mocks__/styleMock.js', |
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| |
| |
| '^.+\\.(png|jpg|jpeg|gif|webp|avif|ico|bmp|svg)$': `<rootDir>/__mocks__/fileMock.js`, |
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|
| |
| '^@/components/(.*)$': '<rootDir>/components/$1', |
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|
| |
| '@next/font/(.*)': `<rootDir>/__mocks__/nextFontMock.js`, |
| |
| 'next/font/(.*)': `<rootDir>/__mocks__/nextFontMock.js`, |
| |
| 'server-only': `<rootDir>/__mocks__/empty.js`, |
| }, |
| |
| |
| testPathIgnorePatterns: ['<rootDir>/node_modules/', '<rootDir>/.next/'], |
| testEnvironment: 'jsdom', |
| transform: { |
| |
| |
| '^.+\\.(js|jsx|ts|tsx)$': ['babel-jest', { presets: ['next/babel'] }], |
| }, |
| transformIgnorePatterns: [ |
| '/node_modules/', |
| '^.+\\.module\\.(css|sass|scss)$', |
| ], |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| You can learn more about each configuration option in the [Jest docs](https: |
|
|
| ### Handling stylesheets and image imports |
|
|
| Stylesheets and images aren't used in the tests but importing them may cause errors, so they will need to be mocked. |
| |
| Create the mock files referenced in the configuration above - `fileMock.js` and `styleMock.js` - inside a `__mocks__` directory: |
| |
| ```js filename="__mocks__/fileMock.js" |
| module.exports = 'test-file-stub' |
| ``` |
| |
| ```js filename="__mocks__/styleMock.js" |
| module.exports = {} |
| ``` |
| |
| For more information on handling static assets, please refer to the [Jest Docs](https://jestjs.io/docs/webpack#handling-static-assets). |
| |
| ## Handling Fonts |
| |
| To handle fonts, create the `nextFontMock.js` file inside the `__mocks__` directory, and add the following configuration: |
| |
| ```js filename="__mocks__/nextFontMock.js" |
| module.exports = new Proxy( |
| {}, |
| { |
| get: function getter() { |
| return () => ({ |
| className: 'className', |
| variable: 'variable', |
| style: { fontFamily: 'fontFamily' }, |
| }) |
| }, |
| } |
| ) |
| ``` |
| |
| </PagesOnly> |
| |
| ## Optional: Handling Absolute Imports and Module Path Aliases |
| |
| If your project is using [Module Path Aliases](/docs/app/getting-started/installation#set-up-absolute-imports-and-module-path-aliases), you will need to configure Jest to resolve the imports by matching the paths option in the `jsconfig.json` file with the `moduleNameMapper` option in the `jest.config.js` file. For example: |
| |
| ```json filename="tsconfig.json or jsconfig.json" |
| { |
| "compilerOptions": { |
| "module": "esnext", |
| "moduleResolution": "bundler", |
| "baseUrl": "./", |
| "paths": { |
| "@/components/*": ["components/*"] |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ```js filename="jest.config.js" |
| moduleNameMapper: { |
| // ... |
| '^@/components/(.*)$': '<rootDir>/components/$1', |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Optional: Extend Jest with custom matchers |
| |
| `@testing-library/jest-dom` includes a set of convenient [custom matchers](https://github.com/testing-library/jest-dom#custom-matchers) such as `.toBeInTheDocument()` making it easier to write tests. You can import the custom matchers for every test by adding the following option to the Jest configuration file: |
| |
| ```ts filename="jest.config.ts" switcher |
| setupFilesAfterEnv: ['<rootDir>/jest.setup.ts'] |
| ``` |
| |
| ```js filename="jest.config.js" switcher |
| setupFilesAfterEnv: ['<rootDir>/jest.setup.js'] |
| ``` |
| |
| Then, inside `jest.setup`, add the following import: |
| |
| ```ts filename="jest.setup.ts" switcher |
| import '@testing-library/jest-dom' |
| ``` |
| |
| ```js filename="jest.setup.js" switcher |
| import '@testing-library/jest-dom' |
| ``` |
| |
| > **Good to know:** [`extend-expect` was removed in `v6.0`](https://github.com/testing-library/jest-dom/releases/tag/v6.0.0), so if you are using `@testing-library/jest-dom` before version 6, you will need to import `@testing-library/jest-dom/extend-expect` instead. |
| |
| If you need to add more setup options before each test, you can add them to the `jest.setup` file above. |
| |
| ## Add a test script to `package.json` |
| |
| Finally, add a Jest `test` script to your `package.json` file: |
| |
| ```json filename="package.json" highlight={6-7} |
| { |
| "scripts": { |
| "dev": "next dev", |
| "build": "next build", |
| "start": "next start", |
| "test": "jest", |
| "test:watch": "jest --watch" |
| } |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| `jest --watch` will re-run tests when a file is changed. For more Jest CLI options, please refer to the [Jest Docs](https://jestjs.io/docs/cli#reference). |
| |
| ### Creating your first test |
| |
| Your project is now ready to run tests. Create a folder called `__tests__` in your project's root directory. |
|
|
| <PagesOnly> |
|
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| For example, we can add a test to check if the `<Home />` component successfully renders a heading: |
|
|
| ```jsx filename="pages/index.js |
| export default function Home() { |
| return <h1>Home</h1> |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ```jsx filename="__tests__/index.test.js" |
| import '@testing-library/jest-dom' |
| import { render, screen } from '@testing-library/react' |
| import Home from '../pages/index' |
| |
| describe('Home', () => { |
| it('renders a heading', () => { |
| render(<Home />) |
| |
| const heading = screen.getByRole('heading', { level: 1 }) |
| |
| expect(heading).toBeInTheDocument() |
| }) |
| }) |
| ``` |
| |
| </PagesOnly> |
| |
| <AppOnly> |
| |
| For example, we can add a test to check if the `<Page />` component successfully renders a heading: |
| |
| ```jsx filename="app/page.js" |
| import Link from 'next/link' |
| |
| export default function Page() { |
| return ( |
| <div> |
| <h1>Home</h1> |
| <Link href="/about">About</Link> |
| </div> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ```jsx filename="__tests__/page.test.jsx" |
| import '@testing-library/jest-dom' |
| import { render, screen } from '@testing-library/react' |
| import Page from '../app/page' |
| |
| describe('Page', () => { |
| it('renders a heading', () => { |
| render(<Page />) |
| |
| const heading = screen.getByRole('heading', { level: 1 }) |
| |
| expect(heading).toBeInTheDocument() |
| }) |
| }) |
| ``` |
| |
| </AppOnly> |
| |
| Optionally, add a [snapshot test](https://jestjs.io/docs/snapshot-testing) to keep track of any unexpected changes in your component: |
| |
| <PagesOnly> |
| |
| ```jsx filename="__tests__/snapshot.js" |
| import { render } from '@testing-library/react' |
| import Home from '../pages/index' |
| |
| it('renders homepage unchanged', () => { |
| const { container } = render(<Home />) |
| expect(container).toMatchSnapshot() |
| }) |
| ``` |
| |
| > **Good to know**: Test files should not be included inside the Pages Router because any files inside the Pages Router are considered routes. |
| |
| </PagesOnly> |
| |
| <AppOnly> |
| |
| ```jsx filename="__tests__/snapshot.js" |
| import { render } from '@testing-library/react' |
| import Page from '../app/page' |
| |
| it('renders homepage unchanged', () => { |
| const { container } = render(<Page />) |
| expect(container).toMatchSnapshot() |
| }) |
| ``` |
| |
| </AppOnly> |
| |
| ## Running your tests |
| |
| Then, run the following command to run your tests: |
| |
| ```bash filename="Terminal" |
| npm run test |
| # or |
| yarn test |
| # or |
| pnpm test |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Additional Resources |
| |
| For further reading, you may find these resources helpful: |
| |
| - [Next.js with Jest example](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/examples/with-jest) |
| - [Jest Docs](https://jestjs.io/docs/getting-started) |
| - [React Testing Library Docs](https://testing-library.com/docs/react-testing-library/intro/) |
| - [Testing Playground](https://testing-playground.com/) - use good testing practices to match elements. |
| |