| --- |
| title: useRouter |
| description: Learn more about the API of the Next.js Router, and access the router instance in your page with the useRouter hook. |
| --- |
|
|
| If you want to access the [`router` object](#router-object) inside any function component in your app, you can use the `useRouter` hook, take a look at the following example: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| function ActiveLink({ children, href }) { |
| const router = useRouter() |
| const style = { |
| marginRight: 10, |
| color: router.asPath === href ? 'red' : 'black', |
| } |
|
|
| const handleClick = (e) => { |
| e.preventDefault() |
| router.push(href) |
| } |
|
|
| return ( |
| <a href={href} onClick={handleClick} style={style}> |
| {children} |
| </a> |
| ) |
| } |
|
|
| export default ActiveLink |
| ``` |
|
|
| > `useRouter` is a [React Hook](https: |
|
|
| ## `router` object |
|
|
| The following is the definition of the `router` object returned by both [`useRouter`](#top) and [`withRouter`](#withrouter): |
|
|
| - `pathname`: `String` - The path for current route file that comes after `/pages`. Therefore, `basePath`, `locale` and trailing slash (`trailingSlash: true`) are not included. |
| - `query`: `Object` - The query string parsed to an object, including [dynamic route](/docs/pages/building-your-application/routing/dynamic-routes) parameters. It will be an empty object during prerendering if the page doesn't use [Server-side Rendering](/docs/pages/building-your-application/data-fetching/get-server-side-props). Defaults to `{}` |
| - `asPath`: `String` - The path as shown in the browser including the search params and respecting the `trailingSlash` configuration. `basePath` and `locale` are not included. |
| - `isFallback`: `boolean` - Whether the current page is in [fallback mode](/docs/pages/api-reference/functions/get-static-paths#fallback-true). |
| - `basePath`: `String` - The active [basePath](/docs/app/api-reference/config/next-config-js/basePath) (if enabled). |
| - `locale`: `String` - The active locale (if enabled). |
| - `locales`: `String[]` - All supported locales (if enabled). |
| - `defaultLocale`: `String` - The current default locale (if enabled). |
| - `domainLocales`: `Array<{domain, defaultLocale, locales}>` - Any configured domain locales. |
| - `isReady`: `boolean` - Whether the router fields are updated client-side and ready for use. Should only be used inside of `useEffect` methods and not for conditionally rendering on the server. See related docs for use case with [automatically statically optimized pages](/docs/pages/building-your-application/rendering/automatic-static-optimization) |
| - `isPreview`: `boolean` - Whether the application is currently in [preview mode](/docs/pages/guides/preview-mode). |
|
|
| > Using the `asPath` field may lead to a mismatch between client and server if the page is rendered using server-side rendering or [automatic static optimization](/docs/pages/building-your-application/rendering/automatic-static-optimization). Avoid using `asPath` until the `isReady` field is `true`. |
|
|
| The following methods are included inside `router`: |
|
|
| ### router.push |
|
|
| Handles client-side transitions, this method is useful for cases where [`next/link`](/docs/pages/api-reference/components/link) is not enough. |
|
|
| ```js |
| router.push(url, as, options) |
| ``` |
|
|
| - `url`: `UrlObject | String` - The URL to navigate to (see [Node.JS URL module documentation](https: |
| - `as`: `UrlObject | String` - Optional decorator for the path that will be shown in the browser URL bar. Before Next.js 9.5.3 this was used for dynamic routes. |
| - `options` - Optional object with the following configuration options: |
| - `scroll` - Optional boolean, controls scrolling to the top of the page after navigation. Defaults to `true` |
| - [`shallow`](/docs/pages/building-your-application/routing/linking-and-navigating#shallow-routing): Update the path of the current page without rerunning [`getStaticProps`](/docs/pages/building-your-application/data-fetching/get-static-props), [`getServerSideProps`](/docs/pages/building-your-application/data-fetching/get-server-side-props) or [`getInitialProps`](/docs/pages/api-reference/functions/get-initial-props). Defaults to `false` |
| - `locale` - Optional string, indicates locale of the new page |
|
|
| > You don't need to use `router.push` for external URLs. [window.location](https: |
|
|
| Navigating to `pages/about.js`, which is a predefined route: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| return ( |
| <button type="button" onClick={() => router.push('/about')}> |
| Click me |
| </button> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| Navigating `pages/post/[pid].js`, which is a dynamic route: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| return ( |
| <button type="button" onClick={() => router.push('/post/abc')}> |
| Click me |
| </button> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| Redirecting the user to `pages/login.js`, useful for pages behind [authentication](/docs/pages/guides/authentication): |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| |
| const useUser = () => ({ user: null, loading: false }) |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const { user, loading } = useUser() |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| useEffect(() => { |
| if (!(user || loading)) { |
| router.push('/login') |
| } |
| }, [user, loading]) |
|
|
| return <p>Redirecting...</p> |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| #### Resetting state after navigation |
|
|
| When navigating to the same page in Next.js, the page's state **will not** be reset by default as React does not unmount unless the parent component has changed. |
|
|
| ```jsx filename="pages/[slug].js" |
| import Link from 'next/link' |
| import { useState } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page(props) { |
| const router = useRouter() |
| const [count, setCount] = useState(0) |
| return ( |
| <div> |
| <h1>Page: {router.query.slug}</h1> |
| <p>Count: {count}</p> |
| <button onClick={() => setCount(count + 1)}>Increase count</button> |
| <Link href="/one">one</Link> <Link href="/two">two</Link> |
| </div> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| In the above example, navigating between `/one` and `/two` **will not** reset the count . The `useState` is maintained between renders because the top-level React component, `Page`, is the same. |
|
|
| If you do not want this behavior, you have a couple of options: |
|
|
| - Manually ensure each state is updated using `useEffect`. In the above example, that could look like: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| useEffect(() => { |
| setCount(0) |
| }, [router.query.slug]) |
| ``` |
|
|
| - Use a React `key` to [tell React to remount the component](https: |
|
|
| ```jsx filename="pages/_app.js" |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) { |
| const router = useRouter() |
| return <Component key={router.asPath} {...pageProps} /> |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| #### With URL object |
|
|
| You can use a URL object in the same way you can use it for [`next/link`](/docs/pages/api-reference/components/link#passing-a-url-object). Works for both the `url` and `as` parameters: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function ReadMore({ post }) { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| return ( |
| <button |
| type="button" |
| onClick={() => { |
| router.push({ |
| pathname: '/post/[pid]', |
| query: { pid: post.id }, |
| }) |
| }} |
| > |
| Click here to read more |
| </button> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### router.replace |
|
|
| Similar to the `replace` prop in [`next/link`](/docs/pages/api-reference/components/link), `router.replace` will prevent adding a new URL entry into the `history` stack. |
|
|
| ```js |
| router.replace(url, as, options) |
| ``` |
|
|
| - The API for `router.replace` is exactly the same as the API for [`router.push`](#routerpush). |
|
|
| Take a look at the following example: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| return ( |
| <button type="button" onClick={() => router.replace('/home')}> |
| Click me |
| </button> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### router.prefetch |
|
|
| Prefetch pages for faster client-side transitions. This method is only useful for navigations without [`next/link`](/docs/pages/api-reference/components/link), as `next/link` takes care of prefetching pages automatically. |
|
|
| > This is a production only feature. Next.js doesn't prefetch pages in development. |
|
|
| ```js |
| router.prefetch(url, as, options) |
| ``` |
|
|
| - `url` - The URL to prefetch, including explicit routes (e.g. `/dashboard`) and dynamic routes (e.g. `/product/[id]`) |
| - `as` - Optional decorator for `url`. Before Next.js 9.5.3 this was used to prefetch dynamic routes. |
| - `options` - Optional object with the following allowed fields: |
| - `locale` - allows providing a different locale from the active one. If `false`, `url` has to include the locale as the active locale won't be used. |
|
|
| Let's say you have a login page, and after a login, you redirect the user to the dashboard. For that case, we can prefetch the dashboard to make a faster transition, like in the following example: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useCallback, useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Login() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
| const handleSubmit = useCallback((e) => { |
| e.preventDefault() |
|
|
| fetch('/api/login', { |
| method: 'POST', |
| headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }, |
| body: JSON.stringify({ |
| |
| }), |
| }).then((res) => { |
| |
| if (res.ok) router.push('/dashboard') |
| }) |
| }, []) |
|
|
| useEffect(() => { |
| |
| router.prefetch('/dashboard') |
| }, [router]) |
|
|
| return ( |
| <form onSubmit={handleSubmit}> |
| {} |
| <button type="submit">Login</button> |
| </form> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### router.beforePopState |
|
|
| In some cases (for example, if using a [Custom Server](/docs/pages/guides/custom-server)), you may wish to listen to [popstate](https: |
|
|
| ```js |
| router.beforePopState(cb) |
| ``` |
|
|
| - `cb` - The function to run on incoming `popstate` events. The function receives the state of the event as an object with the following props: |
| - `url`: `String` - the route for the new state. This is usually the name of a `page` |
| - `as`: `String` - the url that will be shown in the browser |
| - `options`: `Object` - Additional options sent by [router.push](#routerpush) |
|
|
| If `cb` returns `false`, the Next.js router will not handle `popstate`, and you'll be responsible for handling it in that case. See [Disabling file-system routing](/docs/pages/guides/custom-server#disabling-file-system-routing). |
|
|
| You could use `beforePopState` to manipulate the request, or force a SSR refresh, as in the following example: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| useEffect(() => { |
| router.beforePopState(({ url, as, options }) => { |
| |
| if (as !== '/' && as !== '/other') { |
| |
| window.location.href = as |
| return false |
| } |
|
|
| return true |
| }) |
| }, [router]) |
|
|
| return <p>Welcome to the page</p> |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### router.back |
|
|
| Navigate back in history. Equivalent to clicking the browser’s back button. It executes `window.history.back()`. |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| return ( |
| <button type="button" onClick={() => router.back()}> |
| Click here to go back |
| </button> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### router.reload |
|
|
| Reload the current URL. Equivalent to clicking the browser’s refresh button. It executes `window.location.reload()`. |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| return ( |
| <button type="button" onClick={() => router.reload()}> |
| Click here to reload |
| </button> |
| ) |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### router.events |
|
|
| You can listen to different events happening inside the Next.js Router. Here's a list of supported events: |
|
|
| - `routeChangeStart(url, { shallow })` - Fires when a route starts to change |
| - `routeChangeComplete(url, { shallow })` - Fires when a route changed completely |
| - `routeChangeError(err, url, { shallow })` - Fires when there's an error when changing routes, or a route load is cancelled |
| - `err.cancelled` - Indicates if the navigation was cancelled |
| - `beforeHistoryChange(url, { shallow })` - Fires before changing the browser's history |
| - `hashChangeStart(url, { shallow })` - Fires when the hash will change but not the page |
| - `hashChangeComplete(url, { shallow })` - Fires when the hash has changed but not the page |
|
|
| > **Good to know**: Here `url` is the URL shown in the browser, including the [`basePath`](/docs/app/api-reference/config/next-config-js/basePath). |
|
|
| For example, to listen to the router event `routeChangeStart`, open or create `pages/_app.js` and subscribe to the event, like so: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| useEffect(() => { |
| const handleRouteChange = (url, { shallow }) => { |
| console.log( |
| `App is changing to ${url} ${ |
| shallow ? 'with' : 'without' |
| } shallow routing` |
| ) |
| } |
|
|
| router.events.on('routeChangeStart', handleRouteChange) |
|
|
| |
| |
| return () => { |
| router.events.off('routeChangeStart', handleRouteChange) |
| } |
| }, [router]) |
|
|
| return <Component {...pageProps} /> |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| > We use a [Custom App](/docs/pages/building-your-application/routing/custom-app) (`pages/_app.js`) for this example to subscribe to the event because it's not unmounted on page navigations, but you can subscribe to router events on any component in your application. |
|
|
| Router events should be registered when a component mounts ([useEffect](https: |
|
|
| If a route load is cancelled (for example, by clicking two links rapidly in succession), `routeChangeError` will fire. And the passed `err` will contain a `cancelled` property set to `true`, as in the following example: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) { |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| useEffect(() => { |
| const handleRouteChangeError = (err, url) => { |
| if (err.cancelled) { |
| console.log(`Route to ${url} was cancelled!`) |
| } |
| } |
|
|
| router.events.on('routeChangeError', handleRouteChangeError) |
|
|
| |
| |
| return () => { |
| router.events.off('routeChangeError', handleRouteChangeError) |
| } |
| }, [router]) |
|
|
| return <Component {...pageProps} /> |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ## The `next/compat/router` export |
|
|
| This is the same `useRouter` hook, but can be used in both `app` and `pages` directories. |
|
|
| It differs from `next/router` in that it does not throw an error when the pages router is not mounted, and instead has a return type of `NextRouter | null`. |
| This allows developers to convert components to support running in both `app` and `pages` as they transition to the `app` router. |
|
|
| A component that previously looked like this: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
| const MyComponent = () => { |
| const { isReady, query } = useRouter() |
| |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| Will error when converted over to `next/compat/router`, as `null` can not be destructured. Instead, developers will be able to take advantage of new hooks: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/compat/router' |
| import { useSearchParams } from 'next/navigation' |
| const MyComponent = () => { |
| const router = useRouter() |
| const searchParams = useSearchParams() |
| useEffect(() => { |
| if (router && !router.isReady) { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| |
| const search = searchParams.get('search') |
| |
| }, [router, searchParams]) |
| |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| This component will now work in both `pages` and `app` directories. When the component is no longer used in `pages`, you can remove the references to the compat router: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useSearchParams } from 'next/navigation' |
| const MyComponent = () => { |
| const searchParams = useSearchParams() |
| |
| const search = searchParams.get('search') |
| |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### Using `useRouter` outside of Next.js context in pages |
|
|
| Another specific use case is when rendering components outside of a Next.js application context, such as inside `getServerSideProps` on the `pages` directory. In this case, the compat router can be used to avoid errors: |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { renderToString } from 'react-dom/server' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/compat/router' |
| const MyComponent = () => { |
| const router = useRouter() |
| |
| } |
| export async function getServerSideProps() { |
| const renderedComponent = renderToString(<MyComponent />) |
| return { |
| props: { |
| renderedComponent, |
| }, |
| } |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ## Potential ESLint errors |
|
|
| Certain methods accessible on the `router` object return a Promise. If you have the ESLint rule, [no-floating-promises](https: |
|
|
| If your application needs this rule, you should either `void` the promise – or use an `async` function, `await` the Promise, then void the function call. **This is not applicable when the method is called from inside an `onClick` handler**. |
|
|
| The affected methods are: |
|
|
| - `router.push` |
| - `router.replace` |
| - `router.prefetch` |
|
|
| ### Potential solutions |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { useEffect } from 'react' |
| import { useRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| |
| const useUser = () => ({ user: null, loading: false }) |
|
|
| export default function Page() { |
| const { user, loading } = useUser() |
| const router = useRouter() |
|
|
| useEffect(() => { |
| |
| |
| router.push('/login') |
|
|
| |
| if (!(user || loading)) { |
| void router.push('/login') |
| } |
| |
| async function handleRouteChange() { |
| if (!(user || loading)) { |
| await router.push('/login') |
| } |
| } |
| void handleRouteChange() |
| }, [user, loading]) |
|
|
| return <p>Redirecting...</p> |
| } |
| ``` |
|
|
| ## withRouter |
|
|
| If [`useRouter`](#router-object) is not the best fit for you, `withRouter` can also add the same [`router` object](#router-object) to any component. |
|
|
| ### Usage |
|
|
| ```jsx |
| import { withRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| function Page({ router }) { |
| return <p>{router.pathname}</p> |
| } |
|
|
| export default withRouter(Page) |
| ``` |
|
|
| ### TypeScript |
|
|
| To use class components with `withRouter`, the component needs to accept a router prop: |
|
|
| ```tsx |
| import React from 'react' |
| import { withRouter, NextRouter } from 'next/router' |
|
|
| interface WithRouterProps { |
| router: NextRouter |
| } |
|
|
| interface MyComponentProps extends WithRouterProps {} |
|
|
| class MyComponent extends React.Component<MyComponentProps> { |
| render() { |
| return <p>{this.props.router.pathname}</p> |
| } |
| } |
|
|
| export default withRouter(MyComponent) |
| ``` |
|
|