Routing

NextUI Components such as Tabs, Listbox, Dropdown and many others offer the flexibility to be rendered as HTML links. Explore this page to learn how to integrate them with client side routing.

Introduction

By default, links perform native browser navigation when they are interacted with. However, many apps and frameworks use client side routers to avoid a full page reload when navigating between pages. The NextUIProvider component configures all NextUI components within it to navigate using the client side router you provide.

Set this up once in the root of your app, and any NextUI component with the href prop will automatically navigate using your router.

NextUIProvider Setup

The NextUIProvider accepts a prop called navigate. This should be set to a function received from your router for performing a client side navigation programmatically. The following example shows the general pattern. Framework-specific examples are shown below.

import * as React from "react";
// 1. import `NextUIProvider` component
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
function App() { const navigate = useNavigateFromYourRouter();
// 2. Add the `navigate` function to the `NextUIProvider`
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={navigate}>
<YourApplication />
</NextUIProvider>
);
}
const navigate = useNavigateFromYourRouter();
// 2. Add the `navigate` function to the `NextUIProvider`
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={navigate}>
<YourApplication />
</NextUIProvider>
);
}

Next.js

App Router

Go to your app/providers.tsx or app/providers.jsx (create it if it doesn't exist) and add the useRouter hook from next/navigation, it returns a router object that can be used to perform navigation.

Add the useRouter

// app/providers.tsx
"use client"
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
import {useRouter} from "next/navigation"
export function Providers({children}: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
const router = useRouter();
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={router.push}>
{children}
</NextUIProvider>
)
}

Add Provider to Root

Now, Go to your root layout page and wrap it with the NextUIProvider:

// app/layout.tsx
import {Providers} from "./providers";
export default function RootLayout({children}: { children: React.ReactNode }) { return (
<html lang="en" className="dark">
<body>
<Providers>
{children}
</Providers>
</body>
</html>
);
}
return (
<html lang="en" className="dark">
<body>
<Providers>
{children}
</Providers>
</body>
</html>
);
}

Note: Skip this step if you already set up the NextUIProvider in your app.

Add useHref (Optional)

If you are using the Next.js basePath setting, you'll need to configure an environment variable to access it.

// next.config.js
const basePath = "...";
const nextConfig = {
basePath,
env: {
BASE_PATH: basePath
}
};

Then, provide a custom useHref function to prepend it to the href for all links.

// app/providers.tsx
"use client"
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
import {useRouter} from "next/navigation"
export function Providers({children}: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
const router = useRouter();
const useHref = (href: string) => process.env.BASE_PATH + href;
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={router.push} useHref={useHref}>
{children}
</NextUIProvider>
)
}

Pages Router

Go to pages/_app.js or pages/_app.tsx (create it if it doesn't exist) and add theuseRouter hook from next/router, it returns a router object that can be used to perform navigation.

// pages/_app.tsx
import type { AppProps } from "next/app";
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
import {useRouter} from "next/router";
function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }: AppProps) { const router = useRouter();
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={router.push}>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</NextUIProvider>
)
}
const router = useRouter();
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={router.push}>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</NextUIProvider>
)
}
export default MyApp;

When using the basePath configuration option, provide a useHref option to the router passed to Provider to prepend it to links automatically.

// pages/_app.tsx
import type { AppProps } from "next/app";
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
import {useRouter} from "next/router";
function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }: AppProps) { const router = useRouter();
const useHref = (href: string) => router.basePath + href;
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={router.push} useHref={useHref}>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</NextUIProvider>
)
}
const router = useRouter();
const useHref = (href: string) => router.basePath + href;
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={router.push} useHref={useHref}>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</NextUIProvider>
)
}
export default MyApp;

React Router

The useNavigate hook from react-router-dom returns a navigate function that can be used to perform navigation.

The useHref hook can also be provided if you're using React Router's basename option. Ensure that the component that calls useNavigate and renders Provider is inside the router component (e.g. BrowserRouter) so that it has access to React Router's internal context. The React Router <Routes> element should also be defined inside <NextUIProvider> so that links inside the rendered routes have access to the router.

Go to the App file commonly called App.jsx or App.tsx, add the useNavigate hook and pass the navigate function to the NextUIProvider:

// App.tsx or App.jsx
import {BrowserRouter, useNavigate, useHref} from "react-router-dom";
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
function App() { const navigate = useNavigate();
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={navigate} useHref={useHref}>
{/* Your app here... */}
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<HomePage />} />
{/* ... */}
</Routes>
</NextUIProvider>
);
}
const navigate = useNavigate();
return (
<NextUIProvider navigate={navigate} useHref={useHref}>
{/* Your app here... */}
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<HomePage />} />
{/* ... */}
</Routes>
</NextUIProvider>
);
}
// main.tsx or main.jsx
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById("root")).render(
<React.StrictMode>
<BrowserRouter>
<App />
</BrowserRouter>
</React.StrictMode>,
)

Ensure that the component that calls useNavigate and renders NextUIProvider is inside the router component (e.g. BrowserRouter) so that it has access to React Router's internal context. The React Router <Routes> element should also be defined inside NextUIProvider so that links inside the rendered routes have access to the router.

Remix

Remix uses React Router under the hood, so the same useNavigate and useHref hook described above also works in Remix apps. NextUIProvider should be rendered at the root of each page that includes NextUI components, or in app/root.tsx to add it to all pages. See the Remix docs for more details.

// app/root.tsx
import {useNavigate, useHref, Outlet} from "@remix-run/react";
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
export default function App() { const navigate = useNavigate();
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
{/* ... */}
</head>
<body>
<NextUIProvider navigate={navigate} useHref={useHref}>
<Outlet />
</NextUIProvider>
{/* ... */}
</body>
</html>
);
}
const navigate = useNavigate();
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
{/* ... */}
</head>
<body>
<NextUIProvider navigate={navigate} useHref={useHref}>
<Outlet />
</NextUIProvider>
{/* ... */}
</body>
</html>
);
}

TanStack

To use TanStack Router with NextUI, render NextUI's RouterProvider inside your root route. Use router.navigate in the navigate prop, and router.buildLocation in the useHref prop.

// app/root.tsx
import {NextUIProvider} from "@nextui-org/react";
function RootRoute() { let router = useRouter();
return (
<NextUIProvider
navigate={(to, options) => router.navigate({ to, ...options })}
useHref={(to) => router.buildLocation({ to }).href}
>
{/* You app here... */}
</NextUIProvider>
);
}
let router = useRouter();
return (
<NextUIProvider
navigate={(to, options) => router.navigate({ to, ...options })}
useHref={(to) => router.buildLocation({ to }).href}
>
{/* You app here... */}
</NextUIProvider>
);
}

Usage examples

Now that you have set up the NextUIProvider in your app, you can use the href prop in the Tabs, Listbox and Dropdown items to navigate between pages.

The Link component will also use the navigate function from the NextUIProvider to navigate between pages.

import { Tabs,
Tab,
Listbox,
ListboxItem,
Dropdown,
DropdownTrigger,
DropdownMenu,
DropdownItem,
Button,
Link,
} from "@nextui-org/react";
Tabs,
Tab,
Listbox,
ListboxItem,
Dropdown,
DropdownTrigger,
DropdownMenu,
DropdownItem,
Button,
Link,
} from "@nextui-org/react";
function App() { return (
<>
<Tabs aria-label="Navigation">
<Tab key="home" href="/home">Home</Tab>
<Tab key="about" href="/about">About</Tab>
</Tabs>
<Listbox aria-label="Navigation">
<ListboxItem key="home" href="/home">Home</ListboxItem>
<ListboxItem key="about" href="/about">About</ListboxItem>
</Listbox>
<Dropdown>
<DropdownTrigger>
<Button>Open</Button>
</DropdownTrigger>
<DropdownMenu aria-label="Navigation">
<DropdownItem key="home" href="/home">Home</DropdownItem>
<DropdownItem key="about" href="/about">About</DropdownItem>
</DropdownMenu>
</Dropdown>
<Link href="/home">Home</Link>
<Link href="/about">About</Link>
</>
);
}
return (
<>
<Tabs aria-label="Navigation">
<Tab key="home" href="/home">Home</Tab>
<Tab key="about" href="/about">About</Tab>
</Tabs>
<Listbox aria-label="Navigation">
<ListboxItem key="home" href="/home">Home</ListboxItem>
<ListboxItem key="about" href="/about">About</ListboxItem>
</Listbox>
<Dropdown>
<DropdownTrigger>
<Button>Open</Button>
</DropdownTrigger>
<DropdownMenu aria-label="Navigation">
<DropdownItem key="home" href="/home">Home</DropdownItem>
<DropdownItem key="about" href="/about">About</DropdownItem>
</DropdownMenu>
</Dropdown>
<Link href="/home">Home</Link>
<Link href="/about">About</Link>
</>
);
}