--- description: Next.js has built-in support for internationalized routing and language detection. Learn more here. --- # Internationalized Routing
Examples
Next.js has built-in support for internationalized ([i18n](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internationalization_and_localization#Naming)) routing since `v10.0.0`. You can provide a list of locales, the default locale, and domain-specific locales and Next.js will automatically handle the routing. The i18n routing support is currently meant to complement existing i18n library solutions like `react-intl`, `react-i18next`, `lingui`, `rosetta`, and others by streamlining the routes and locale parsing. ## Getting started To get started, add the `i18n` config to your `next.config.js` file. Locales are [UTS Locale Identifiers](https://www.unicode.org/reports/tr35/tr35-59/tr35.html#Identifiers), a standardized format for defining locales. Generally a Locale Identifier is made up of a language, region, and script separated by a dash: `language-region-script`. The region and script are optional. An example: - `en-US` - English as spoken in the United States - `nl-NL` - Dutch as spoken in the Netherlands - `nl` - Dutch, no specific region ```js // next.config.js module.exports = { i18n: { // These are all the locales you want to support in // your application locales: ['en-US', 'fr', 'nl-NL'], // This is the default locale you want to be used when visiting // a non-locale prefixed path e.g. `/hello` defaultLocale: 'en-US', // This is a list of locale domains and the default locale they // should handle (these are only required when setting up domain routing) // Note: subdomains must be included in the domain value to be matched e.g. "fr.example.com". domains: [ { domain: 'example.com', defaultLocale: 'en-US', }, { domain: 'example.nl', defaultLocale: 'nl-NL', }, { domain: 'example.fr', defaultLocale: 'fr', }, ], }, } ``` ## Locale Strategies There are two locale handling strategies: Sub-path Routing and Domain Routing. ### Sub-path Routing Sub-path Routing puts the locale in the url path. ```js // next.config.js module.exports = { i18n: { locales: ['en-US', 'fr', 'nl-NL'], defaultLocale: 'en-US', }, } ``` With the above configuration `en-US`, `fr`, and `nl-NL` will be available to be routed to, and `en-US` is the default locale. If you have a `pages/blog.js` the following urls would be available: - `/blog` - `/fr/blog` - `/nl-nl/blog` The default locale does not have a prefix. ### Domain Routing By using domain routing you can configure locales to be served from different domains: ```js // next.config.js module.exports = { i18n: { locales: ['en-US', 'fr', 'nl-NL', 'nl-BE'], defaultLocale: 'en-US', domains: [ { domain: 'example.com', defaultLocale: 'en-US', }, { domain: 'example.fr', defaultLocale: 'fr', }, { domain: 'example.nl', defaultLocale: 'nl-NL', // specify other locales that should be redirected // to this domain locales: ['nl-BE'], }, ], }, } ``` For example if you have `pages/blog.js` the following urls will be available: - `example.com/blog` - `example.fr/blog` - `example.nl/blog` - `example.nl/nl-BE/blog` ## Automatic Locale Detection When a user visits the application root (generally `/`), Next.js will try to automatically detect which locale the user prefers based on the [`Accept-Language`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Accept-Language) header and the current domain. If a locale other than the default locale is detected, the user will be redirected to either: - **When using Sub-path Routing:** The locale prefixed path - **When using Domain Routing:** The domain with that locale specified as the default When using Domain Routing, if a user with the `Accept-Language` header `fr;q=0.9` visits `example.com`, they will be redirected to `example.fr` since that domain handles the `fr` locale by default. When using Sub-path Routing, the user would be redirected to `/fr`. ### Disabling Automatic Locale Detection The automatic locale detection can be disabled with: ```js // next.config.js module.exports = { i18n: { localeDetection: false, }, } ``` When `localeDetection` is set to `false` Next.js will no longer automatically redirect based on the user's preferred locale and will only provide locale information detected from either the locale based domain or locale path as described above. ## Accessing the locale information You can access the locale information via the Next.js router. For example, using the [`useRouter()`](/docs/api-reference/next/router.md#userouter) hook the following properties are available: - `locale` contains the currently active locale. - `locales` contains all configured locales. - `defaultLocale` contains the configured default locale. When [pre-rendering](/docs/basic-features/pages.md#static-generation-recommended) pages with `getStaticProps` or `getServerSideProps`, the locale information is provided in [the context](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md#getstaticprops-static-generation) provided to the function. When leveraging `getStaticPaths`, the configured locales are provided in the context parameter of the function under `locales` and the configured defaultLocale under `defaultLocale`. ## Transition between locales You can use `next/link` or `next/router` to transition between locales. For `next/link`, a `locale` prop can be provided to transition to a different locale from the currently active one. If no `locale` prop is provided, the currently active `locale` is used during client-transitions. For example: ```jsx import Link from 'next/link' export default function IndexPage(props) { return ( To /fr/another ) } ``` When using the `next/router` methods directly, you can specify the `locale` that should be used via the transition options. For example: ```jsx import { useRouter } from 'next/router' export default function IndexPage(props) { const router = useRouter() return (
{ router.push('/another', '/another', { locale: 'fr' }) }} > to /fr/another
) } ``` If you have a `href` that already includes the locale you can opt-out of automatically handling the locale prefixing: ```jsx import Link from 'next/link' export default function IndexPage(props) { return ( To /fr/another ) } ``` ## Leveraging the NEXT_LOCALE cookie Next.js supports overriding the accept-language header with a `NEXT_LOCALE=the-locale` cookie. This cookie can be set using a language switcher and then when a user comes back to the site it will leverage the locale specified in the cookie. For example, if a user prefers the locale `fr` but a `NEXT_LOCALE=en` cookie is set the `en` locale will be used instead until the cookie is removed or expired. ## Search Engine Optimization Since Next.js knows what language the user is visiting it will automatically add the `lang` attribute to the `` tag. Next.js doesn't know about variants of a page so it's up to you to add the `hreflang` meta tags using [`next/head`](/docs/api-reference/next/head.md). You can learn more about `hreflang` in the [Google Webmasters documentation](https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/189077). ## How does this work with Static Generation? > Note that Internationalized Routing does not integrate with [`next export`](/docs/advanced-features/static-html-export.md) as `next export` does not leverage the Next.js routing layer. Hybrid Next.js applications that do not use `next export` are fully supported. ### Automatically Statically Optimized Pages For pages that are [automatically statically optimized](/docs/advanced-features/automatic-static-optimization.md), a version of the page will be generated for each locale. ### Non-dynamic getStaticProps Pages For non-dynamic `getStaticProps` pages, a version is generated for each locale like above. `getStaticProps` is called with each `locale` that is being rendered. If you would like to opt-out of a certain locale from being pre-rendered, you can return `notFound: true` from `getStaticProps` and this variant of the page will not be generated. ```js export async function getStaticProps({ locale }) { // Call an external API endpoint to get posts. // You can use any data fetching library const res = await fetch(`https://.../posts?locale=${locale}`) const posts = await res.json() if (posts.length === 0) { return { notFound: true, } } // By returning { props: posts }, the Blog component // will receive `posts` as a prop at build time return { props: { posts, }, } } ``` ### Dynamic getStaticProps Pages For dynamic `getStaticProps` pages, any locale variants of the page that is desired to be prerendered needs to be returned from [`getStaticPaths`](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md#getstaticpaths-static-generation). Along with the `params` object that can be returned for the `paths`, you can also return a `locale` field specifying which locale you want to render. For example: ```js // pages/blog/[slug].js export const getStaticPaths = ({ locales }) => { return { paths: [ { params: { slug: 'post-1' }, locale: 'en-US' }, { params: { slug: 'post-1' }, locale: 'fr' }, ], fallback: true, } } ```