Appearance
Redirects
Examples
Version History
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v10.2.0 | has added. |
v9.5.0 | Redirects added. |
Redirects allow you to redirect an incoming request path to a different destination path.
To use Redirects you can use the redirects
key in next.config.js
:
javascript
module.exports = {
async redirects() {
return [
{
source: '/about',
destination: '/',
permanent: true,
},
]
},
}
redirects
is an async function that expects an array to be returned holding objects with source
, destination
, and permanent
properties:
source
is the incoming request path pattern.destination
is the path you want to route to.permanent
true
orfalse
- iftrue
will use the 308 status code which instructs clients/search engines to cache the redirect forever, iffalse
will use the 307 status code which is temporary and is not cached.
Why does Next.js use 307 and 308? Traditionally a 302 was used for a temporary redirect, and a 301 for a permanent redirect, but many browsers changed the request method of the redirect to
GET
, regardless of the original method. For example, if the browser made a request toPOST /v1/users
which returned status code302
with location/v2/users
, the subsequent request might beGET /v2/users
instead of the expectedPOST /v2/users
. Next.js uses the 307 temporary redirect, and 308 permanent redirect status codes to explicitly preserve the request method used.
basePath
:false
orundefined
- if false the basePath won't be included when matching, can be used for external rewrites only.locale
:false
orundefined
- whether the locale should not be included when matching.has
is an array of has objects with thetype
,key
andvalue
properties.
Redirects are checked before the filesystem which includes pages and /public
files.
When a redirect is applied, any query values provided in the request will be passed through to the redirect destination. For example, see the following redirect configuration:
javascript
{
source: '/old-blog/:path*',
destination: '/blog/:path*',
permanent: false
}
When /old-blog/post-1?hello=world
is requested, the client will be redirected to /blog/post-1?hello=world
.
Path Matching
Path matches are allowed, for example /old-blog/:slug
will match /old-blog/hello-world
(no nested paths):
javascript
module.exports = {
async redirects() {
return [
{
source: '/old-blog/:slug',
destination: '/news/:slug', // Matched parameters can be used in the destination
permanent: true,
},
]
},
}
Wildcard Path Matching
To match a wildcard path you can use *
after a parameter, for example /blog/:slug*
will match /blog/a/b/c/d/hello-world
:
javascript
module.exports = {
async redirects() {
return [
{
source: '/blog/:slug*',
destination: '/news/:slug*', // Matched parameters can be used in the destination
permanent: true,
},
]
},
}
Regex Path Matching
To match a regex path you can wrap the regex in parentheses after a parameter, for example /post/:slug(\\d{1,})
will match /post/123
but not /post/abc
:
javascript
module.exports = {
async redirects() {
return [
{
source: '/post/:slug(\\d{1,})',
destination: '/news/:slug', // Matched parameters can be used in the destination
permanent: false,
},
]
},
}
The following characters (
, )
, {
, }
, :
, *
, +
, ?
are used for regex path matching, so when used in the source
as non-special values they must be escaped by adding \\
before them:
javascript
module.exports = {
async redirects() {
return [
{
// this will match `/english(default)/something` being requested
source: '/english\\(default\\)/:slug',
destination: '/en-us/:slug',
permanent: false,
},
]
},
}
Header, Cookie, and Query Matching
To only match a redirect when header, cookie, or query values also match the has
field can be used. Both the source
and all has
items must match for the redirect to be applied.
has
items have the following fields:
type
:String
- must be eitherheader
,cookie
,host
, orquery
.key
:String
- the key from the selected type to match against.value
:String
orundefined
- the value to check for, if undefined any value will match. A regex like string can be used to capture a specific part of the value, e.g. if the valuefirst-(?<paramName>.*)
is used forfirst-second
thensecond
will be usable in the destination with:paramName
.
javascript
module.exports = {
async redirects() {
return [
// if the header `x-redirect-me` is present,
// this redirect will be applied
{
source: '/:path((?!another-page$).*)',
has: [
{
type: 'header',
key: 'x-redirect-me',
},
],
permanent: false,
destination: '/another-page',
},
// if the source, query, and cookie are matched,
// this redirect will be applied
{
source: '/specific/:path*',
has: [
{
type: 'query',
key: 'page',
// the page value will not be available in the
// destination since value is provided and doesn't
// use a named capture group e.g. (?<page>home)
value: 'home',
},
{
type: 'cookie',
key: 'authorized',
value: 'true',
},
],
permanent: false,
destination: '/another/:path*',
},
// if the header `x-authorized` is present and
// contains a matching value, this redirect will be applied
{
source: '/',
has: [
{
type: 'header',
key: 'x-authorized',
value: '(?<authorized>yes|true)',
},
],
permanent: false,
destination: '/home?authorized=:authorized',
},
// if the host is `example.com`,
// this redirect will be applied
{
source: '/:path((?!another-page$).*)',
has: [
{
type: 'host',
value: 'example.com',
},
],
permanent: false,
destination: '/another-page',
},
]
},
}
Redirects with basePath support
When leveraging basePath
support with redirects each source
and destination
is automatically prefixed with the basePath
unless you add basePath: false
to the redirect:
javascript
module.exports = {
basePath: '/docs',
async redirects() {
return [
{
source: '/with-basePath', // automatically becomes /nextjs/with-basePath
destination: '/another', // automatically becomes /nextjs/another
permanent: false,
},
{
// does not add /docs since basePath: false is set
source: '/without-basePath',
destination: '/another',
basePath: false,
permanent: false,
},
]
},
}
Redirects with i18n support
When leveraging i18n
support with redirects each source
and destination
is automatically prefixed to handle the configured locales
unless you add locale: false
to the redirect. If locale: false
is used you must prefix the source
and destination
with a locale for it to be matched correctly.
javascript
module.exports = {
i18n: {
locales: ['en', 'fr', 'de'],
defaultLocale: 'en',
},
async redirects() {
return [
{
source: '/with-locale', // automatically handles all locales
destination: '/another', // automatically passes the locale on
permanent: false,
},
{
// does not handle locales automatically since locale: false is set
source: '/nl/with-locale-manual',
destination: '/nl/another',
locale: false,
permanent: false,
},
{
// this matches '/' since `en` is the defaultLocale
source: '/en',
destination: '/en/another',
locale: false,
permanent: false,
},
{
// this gets converted to /(en|fr|de)/(.*) so will not match the top-level
// `/` or `/fr` routes like /:path* would
source: '/(.*)',
destination: '/another',
permanent: false,
},
]
},
}
In some rare cases, you might need to assign a custom status code for older HTTP Clients to properly redirect. In these cases, you can use the statusCode
property instead of the permanent
property, but not both. Note: to ensure IE11 compatibility a Refresh
header is automatically added for the 308 status code.
Other Redirects
- Inside API Routes, you can use
res.redirect()
. - Inside
getStaticProps
andgetServerSideProps
, you can redirect specific pages at request-time.