Before moving forward, we recommend you to read Routing Introduction first.
Client-side transitions between routes can be enabled via the Link
component exported by next/link
.
For an example, consider a pages
directory with the following files:
pages/index.js
pages/about.js
pages/blog/[slug].js
We can have a link to each of these pages like so:
import Link from 'next/link' function Home() { return ( <ul> <li> <Link href="/"> Home </Link> </li> <li> <Link href="/about"> About Us </Link> </li> <li> <Link href="/blog/hello-world"> Blog Post </Link> </li> </ul> ) } export default Home
Link
accepts the following props:
href
- The path or URL to navigate to. This is the only required prop. It can also be an object, see example hereas
- 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, check our previous docs to see how it worked. Note: when this path differs from the one provided in href
the previous href
/as
behavior is used as shown in the previous docs.passHref
- Forces Link
to send the href
property to its child. Defaults to false
prefetch
- Prefetch the page in the background. Defaults to true
. Any <Link />
that is in the viewport (initially or through scroll) will be preloaded. Prefetch can be disabled by passing prefetch={false}
. When prefetch
is set to false
, prefetching will still occur on hover. Pages using Static Generation will preload JSON
files with the data for faster page transitions. Prefetching is only enabled in production.replace
- Replace the current history
state instead of adding a new url into the stack. Defaults to false
scroll
- Scroll to the top of the page after a navigation. Defaults to true
shallow
- Update the path of the current page without rerunning getStaticProps
, getServerSideProps
or getInitialProps
. Defaults to false
locale
- The active locale is automatically prepended. locale
allows for providing a different locale. When false
href
has to include the locale as the default behavior is disabled.There is nothing to do when linking to a dynamic route, including catch all routes, since Next.js 9.5.3 (for older versions check our previous docs). However, it can become quite common and handy to use interpolation or an URL Object to generate the link.
For example, the dynamic route pages/blog/[slug].js
will match the following link:
import Link from 'next/link' function Posts({ posts }) { return ( <ul> {posts.map((post) => ( <li key={post.id}> <Link href={`/blog/${encodeURIComponent(post.slug)}`}> {post.title} </Link> </li> ))} </ul> ) } export default Posts
<a>
tagIf the child of Link
is a custom component that wraps an <a>
tag, you must add passHref
to Link
. This is necessary if you’re using libraries like styled-components. Without this, the <a>
tag will not have the href
attribute, which hurts your site's accessibility and might affect SEO. If you're using ESLint, there is a built-in rule next/link-passhref
to ensure correct usage of passHref
.
import Link from 'next/link' import styled from 'styled-components' // This creates a custom component that wraps an <a> tag const RedLink = styled.a` color: red; ` function NavLink({ href, name }) { // Must add passHref to Link return ( <Link href={href} passHref> <RedLink>{name}</RedLink> </Link> ) } export default NavLink
@jsx jsx
), you must use passHref
even if you use an <a>
tag directly.onClick
property to trigger navigation correctlyIf the child of Link
is a functional component, in addition to using passHref
, you must wrap the component in React.forwardRef
:
import Link from 'next/link' // `onClick`, `href`, and `ref` need to be passed to the DOM element // for proper handling const MyButton = React.forwardRef(({ onClick, href }, ref) => { return ( <a href={href} onClick={onClick} ref={ref}> Click Me </a> ) }) function Home() { return ( <Link href="/about" passHref> <MyButton /> </Link> ) } export default Home
Link
can also receive a URL object and it will automatically format it to create the URL string. Here's how to do it:
import Link from 'next/link' function Home() { return ( <ul> <li> <Link href={{ pathname: '/about', query: { name: 'test' }, }} > About us </Link> </li> <li> <Link href={{ pathname: '/blog/[slug]', query: { slug: 'my-post' }, }} > Blog Post </Link> </li> </ul> ) } export default Home
The above example has a link to:
/about?name=test
/blog/my-post
You can use every property as defined in the Node.js URL module documentation.
The default behavior of the Link
component is to push
a new URL into the history
stack. You can use the replace
prop to prevent adding a new entry, as in the following example:
<Link href="/about" replace> About us </Link>
The default behavior of Link
is to scroll to the top of the page. When there is a hash defined it will scroll to the specific id, like a normal <a>
tag. To prevent scrolling to the top / hash scroll={false}
can be added to Link
:
<Link href="/#hashid" scroll={false}> Disables scrolling to the top </Link>