--- description: Learn more about the API of the Next.js Router, and access the router instance in your page with the useRouter hook. --- # next/router > Before moving forward, we recommend you to read [Routing Introduction](/docs/routing/introduction.md) first. ## useRouter 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.pathname === href ? 'red' : 'black', } const handleClick = (e) => { e.preventDefault() router.push(href) } return ( {children} ) } export default ActiveLink ``` > `useRouter` is a [React Hook](https://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-intro.html), meaning it cannot be used with classes. You can either use [withRouter](#withRouter) or wrap your class in a function component. ## `router` object The following is the definition of the `router` object returned by both [`useRouter`](#useRouter) and [`withRouter`](#withRouter): - `pathname`: `String` - Current route. That is the path of the page in `/pages` - `query`: `Object` - The query string parsed to an object. It will be an empty object during prerendering if the page doesn't have [data fetching requirements](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md). Defaults to `{}` - `asPath`: `String` - The path (including the query) shown in the browser without the configured `basePath` or `locale`. - `isFallback`: `boolean` - Whether the current page is in [fallback mode](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md#fallback-pages). - `basePath`: `String` - The active [basePath](/docs/api-reference/next.config.js/basepath.md) (if enabled). - `locale`: `String` - The active locale (if enabled). - `locales`: `String[]` - All supported locales (if enabled). - `defaultLocale`: `String` - The current default locale (if enabled). Additionally, the following methods are also included inside `router`: ### router.push
Examples
Handles client-side transitions, this method is useful for cases where [`next/link`](/docs/api-reference/next/link.md) is not enough. ```jsx router.push(url, as, options) ``` - `url` - The URL to navigate to - `as` - Optional decorator for the URL that will be shown in the browser. Before Next.js 9.5.3 this was used for dynamic routes, check our [previous docs](https://nextjs.org/docs/tag/v9.5.2/api-reference/next/link#dynamic-routes) to see how it worked - `options` - Optional object with the following configuration options: - [`shallow`](/docs/routing/shallow-routing.md): Update the path of the current page without rerunning [`getStaticProps`](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md#getstaticprops-static-generation), [`getServerSideProps`](/docs/basic-features/data-fetching.md#getserversideprops-server-side-rendering) or [`getInitialProps`](/docs/api-reference/data-fetching/getInitialProps.md). Defaults to `false` > You don't need to use `router.push` for external URLs. [window.location](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/location) is better suited for those cases. #### Usage Navigating to `pages/about.js`, which is a predefined route: ```jsx import { useRouter } from 'next/router' export default function Page() { const router = useRouter() return router.push('/about')}>Click me } ``` Navigating `pages/post/[pid].js`, which is a dynamic route: ```jsx import { useRouter } from 'next/router' export default function Page() { const router = useRouter() return router.push('/post/abc')}>Click me } ``` Redirecting the user to `pages/login.js`, useful for pages behind [authentication](/docs/authentication): ```jsx import { useEffect } from 'react' import { useRouter } from 'next/router' // Here you would fetch and return the user 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

Redirecting...

} ``` #### With URL object You can use a URL object in the same way you can use it for [`next/link`](/docs/api-reference/next/link.md#with-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 ( { router.push({ pathname: '/post/[pid]', query: { pid: post.id }, }) }} > Click here to read more ) } ``` ### router.replace Similar to the `replace` prop in [`next/link`](/docs/api-reference/next/link.md), `router.replace` will prevent adding a new URL entry into the `history` stack. ```jsx router.replace(url, as, options) ``` - The API for `router.replace` is exactly the same as the API for [`router.push`](#router.push). #### Usage Take a look at the following example: ```jsx import { useRouter } from 'next/router' export default function Page() { const router = useRouter() return router.replace('/home')}>Click me } ``` ### router.prefetch Prefetch pages for faster client-side transitions. This method is only useful for navigations without [`next/link`](/docs/api-reference/next/link.md), as `next/link` takes care of prefetching pages automatically. > This is a production only feature. Next.js doesn't prefetch pages on development. ```jsx router.prefetch(url, as) ``` - `url` - The URL to prefetch, that is, a path with a matching page - `as` - Optional decorator for `url`. Before Next.js 9.5.3 this was used to prefetch dynamic routes, check our [previous docs](https://nextjs.org/docs/tag/v9.5.2/api-reference/next/link#dynamic-routes) to see how it worked #### Usage 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({ /* Form data */ }), }).then((res) => { // Do a fast client-side transition to the already prefetched dashboard page if (res.ok) router.push('/dashboard') }) }, []) useEffect(() => { // Prefetch the dashboard page router.prefetch('/dashboard') }, []) return (
{/* Form fields */}
) } ``` ### router.beforePopState In some cases (for example, if using a [Custom Server](/docs/advanced-features/custom-server.md)), you may wish to listen to [popstate](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/popstate) and do something before the router acts on it. ```jsx 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](#router.push) 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/advanced-features/custom-server.md#disabling-file-system-routing). #### Usage 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 }) => { // I only want to allow these two routes! if (as !== '/' && as !== '/other') { // Have SSR render bad routes as a 404. window.location.href = as return false } return true }) }, []) return

Welcome to the page

} ``` ### router.back Navigate back in history. Equivalent to clicking the browser’s back button. It executes `window.history.back()`. #### Usage ```jsx import { useRouter } from 'next/router' export default function Page() { const router = useRouter() return router.back()}>Click here to go back } ``` ### router.reload Reload the current URL. Equivalent to clicking the browser’s refresh button. It executes `window.location.reload()`. #### Usage ```jsx import { useRouter } from 'next/router' export default function Page() { const router = useRouter() return router.reload()}>Click here to reload } ``` ### router.events
Examples
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 just 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 > **Note:** Here `url` is the URL shown in the browser, including the [`basePath`](/docs/api-reference/next.config.js/basepath.md). #### Usage 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) // If the component is unmounted, unsubscribe // from the event with the `off` method: return () => { router.events.off('routeChangeStart', handleRouteChange) } }, []) return } ``` > We use a [Custom App](/docs/advanced-features/custom-app.md) (`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://reactjs.org/docs/hooks-effect.html) or [componentDidMount](https://reactjs.org/docs/react-component.html#componentdidmount) / [componentWillUnmount](https://reactjs.org/docs/react-component.html#componentwillunmount)) or imperatively when an event happens. 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) // If the component is unmounted, unsubscribe // from the event with the `off` method: return () => { router.events.off('routeChangeError', handleRouteChangeError) } }, []) return } ``` ## withRouter If [`useRouter`](#useRouter) 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

{router.pathname}

} export default withRouter(Page) ```