Next.js is supported natively on Netlify, and in most cases you will not need to install or configure anything. This repo includes the packages used to support Next.js on Netlify.
If you build on Netlify, the Next.js Runtime will work with no additional configuration. However if you are building and
deploying locally using the Netlify CLI, you must deploy using netlify deploy --build
. Running the build and deploy
commands separately will not work, because the Next.js Runtime will not generate the required configuration.
If you use next/image
, your images will be automatically
optimized at runtime, ensuring that they are served at the best size and format. The image will be processed on the
first request which means it may take longer to load, but the generated image is then cached at the edge and served as a
static file to future visitors. By default, Next.js will deliver WebP images if the browser supports it. WebP is a new
image format with wide browser support that will usually generate smaller files than png or jpg. You can additionally
enable the AVIF format, which is often even smaller in filesize than WebP. The drawback is that with particularly large
images AVIF may take too long to generate, meaning the function times-out. You can configure
the supported image formats in your
next.config.js
file.
In order to deliver the correct format to a visitor's browser, this uses a Netlify Edge Function. In some cases your
site may not support Edge Functions, in which case it will instead fall back to delivering the original file format. You
may also manually disable the Edge Function by setting the environment variable NEXT_DISABLE_EDGE_IMAGES
to true
.
Should you wish to return custom response headers on images handled by the
netlify-ipx
package, you can add them within your project's netlify.toml
by targeting the /_next/image/*
route:
[[headers]]
for = "/_next/image/*"
[headers.values]
Strict-Transport-Security = "max-age=31536000"
X-Test = 'foobar'
If you wish to disable the use of the image loader which is bundled into the runtime by default, set the DISABLE_IPX
environment variable to true
.
This should only be done if the site is not using next/image
or is using a different loader (such as Cloudinary or Imgix).
See the Next.js documentation for image loader options.
Next.js Middleware works out of the box on Netlify. By default, middleware runs using Netlify Edge Functions. For legacy
support for running Middleware at the origin, set the environment variable NEXT_DISABLE_NETLIFY_EDGE
to true
. Be
aware that this will result in slower performance, as all pages that match middleware must use SSR.
For more details on Next.js Middleware with Netlify, see the middleware docs.
Due to how the site configuration is handled when it's run using Netlify Edge Functions, data such as locale
and defaultLocale
will be missing on the req.nextUrl
object when running netlify dev
.
However, this data is available on req.nextUrl
in a production environment.
If you are using a monorepo you will need to change publish
to point to the full path to the built .next
directory,
which may be in a subdirectory. If you have changed your distDir
then it will need to match that.
If you are using Nx, then you will need to point publish
to the folder inside dist
, e.g. dist/apps/myapp/.next
.
The Next.js Runtime fully supports ISR on Netlify. For more details see the ISR docs.
Note that Netlify has a minimum TTL of 60 seconds for revalidation.
If you are using next export
to generate a static site, you do not need most of the functionality of this Next.js
Runtime and you can remove it. Alternatively you can
set the environment variable
NETLIFY_NEXT_PLUGIN_SKIP
to true
and the Next.js Runtime will handle caching but won't generate any functions for
SSR support. See demos/next-export
for an
example.
Netlify asset optimization should not be used with Next.js sites. Assets are already optimized by Next.js at build time, and doing further optimization can break your site. Ensure that it is not enabled at Site settings > Build & deploy > Post processing > Asset optimization.
The Next.js Runtime works by generating three Netlify functions that handle requests that haven't been pre-rendered.
These are ___netlify-handler
(for SSR and API routes), ___netlify-odb-handler
(for ISR and fallback routes), and
_ipx
(for images). You can see the requests for these in
the function logs. For ISR and fallback routes you will not see any requests
that are served from the edge cache, just actual rendering requests. These are all internal functions, so you won't find
them in your site's own functions directory.
The Next.js Runtime will also generate a Netlify Edge Function called 'ipx' to handle image content negotiation, and if Edge runtime or middleware is enabled it will also generate edge functions for middleware and edge routes.
The Next.js Runtime installs automatically for new Next.js sites on Netlify. You can also install it manually in the following ways:
You can go to the UI and choose the site to install the Next.js Runtime on. This method is recommended because you will benefit from auto-upgrades to important fixes and feature updates.
npm install -D @netlify/plugin-nextjs
...then add the following to your netlify.toml
file:
[[plugins]]
package = "@netlify/plugin-nextjs"
This method is recommended if you wish to pin the Next.js Runtime to a specific version.
If you previously set these values, they're no longer needed and should be removed:
distDir
in yournext.config.js
node_bundler = "esbuild"
innetlify.toml
external_node_modules
innetlify.toml
- The environment variable
NEXT_USE_NETLIFY_EDGE
can be removed as this is now the default
The serverless
and experimental-serverless-trace
targets are deprecated in Next.js 12, and all builds with this Next.js
Runtime will now use the default server
target. If you previously set the target in your next.config.js
, you should
remove it.
If you currently use redirects or rewrites on your site, see
the Rewrites and Redirects guide for
information on changes to how they are handled in this version. In particular, note that _redirects
and _headers
files must be placed in public
, not in the root of the site.
If your site uses pnpm to manage dependencies, currently you must enable public hoisting.
The simplest way to do this is to create a .npmrc
file in the root of your project with the content:
public-hoist-pattern[]=*
If you think you have found a bug in Next.js on Netlify, please open an issue. If you have comments or feature requests, see the discussion board