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This guide will help you migrate an existing Create React App (CRA) site to Next.js.
There are several reasons why you might want to switch from Create React App to Next.js:
Create React App uses purely client-side rendering. Client-side only applications, also known as single-page applications (SPAs), often experience slow initial page loading time. This happens due to a couple of reasons:
The previous issue of slow loading times can be somewhat mitigated with code splitting. However, if you try to do code splitting manually, you can inadvertently introduce network waterfalls. Next.js provides automatic code splitting and tree-shaking built into its router and build pipeline.
A common cause of poor performance occurs when applications make sequential client-server requests to fetch data. One pattern for data fetching in a SPA is to render a placeholder, and then fetch data after the component has mounted. Unfortunately, a child component can only begin fetching data after its parent has finished loading its own data, resulting in a βwaterfallβ of requests.
While client-side data fetching is supported in Next.js, Next.js also lets you move data fetching to the server. This often eliminates client-server waterfalls altogether.
With built-in support for streaming through React Suspense, you can define which parts of your UI load first and in what order, without creating network waterfalls.
This enables you to build pages that are faster to load and eliminate layout shifts.
Depending on your needs, Next.js allows you to choose your data fetching strategy on a page or component-level basis. For example, you could fetch data from your CMS and render blog posts at build time (SSG) for quick load speeds, or fetch data at request time (SSR) when necessary.
Next.js Proxy allows you to run code on the server before a request is completed. For instance, you can avoid a flash of unauthenticated content by redirecting a user to a login page in the proxy for authenticated-only pages. You can also use it for features like A/B testing, experimentation, and internationalization.
Images, fonts, and third-party scripts often have a large impact on an applicationβs performance. Next.js includes specialized components and APIs that automatically optimize them for you.
Our goal is to get a working Next.js application as quickly as possible so that you can then adopt Next.js features incrementally. To begin with, weβll treat your application as a purely client-side application (SPA) without immediately replacing your existing router. This reduces complexity and merge conflicts.
Note: If you are using advanced CRA configurations such as a custom
homepagefield in yourpackage.json, a custom service worker, or specific Babel/webpack tweaks, please see the Additional Considerations section at the end of this guide for tips on replicating or adapting these features in Next.js.
Install Next.js in your existing project:
npm install next@latest
Create a next.config.ts at the root of your project (same level as your package.json). This file holds your Next.js configuration options.
import type { NextConfig } from 'next'
const nextConfig: NextConfig = {
output: 'export', // Outputs a Single-Page Application (SPA)
distDir: 'build', // Changes the build output directory to `build`
}
export default nextConfig
Note: Using
output: 'export'means youβre doing a static export. You will not have access to server-side features like SSR or APIs. You can remove this line to leverage Next.js server features.
A Next.js App Router application must include a root layout file, which is a React Server Component that will wrap all your pages.
The closest equivalent of the root layout file in a CRA application is public/index.html, which includes your <html>, <head>, and <body> tags.
app directory inside your src folder (or at your project root if you prefer app at the root).app directory, create a layout.tsx (or layout.js) file:export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
return '...'
}
export default function RootLayout({ children }) {
return '...'
}
Now copy the content of your old index.html into this <RootLayout> component. Replace body div#root (and body noscript) with <div id="root">{children}</div>.
export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charSet="UTF-8" />
<link rel="icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
<title>React App</title>
<meta name="description" content="Web site created..." />
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
export default function RootLayout({ children }) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8" />
<link rel="icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
<title>React App</title>
<meta name="description" content="Web site created..." />
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
Good to know: Next.js ignores CRAβs
public/manifest.json, additional iconography, and testing configuration by default. If you need these, Next.js has support with its Metadata API and Testing setup.
Next.js automatically includes the <meta charset="UTF-8" /> and <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> tags, so you can remove them from <head>:
export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico" />
<title>React App</title>
<meta name="description" content="Web site created..." />
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
export default function RootLayout({ children }) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico" />
<title>React App</title>
<meta name="description" content="Web site created..." />
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
Any metadata files such as favicon.ico, icon.png, robots.txt are automatically added to the application <head> tag as long as you have them placed into the top level of the app directory. After moving all supported files into the app directory you can safely delete their <link> tags:
export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>React App</title>
<meta name="description" content="Web site created..." />
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
export default function RootLayout({ children }) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>React App</title>
<meta name="description" content="Web site created..." />
</head>
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
Finally, Next.js can manage your last <head> tags with the Metadata API. Move your final metadata info into an exported metadata object:
import type { Metadata } from 'next'
export const metadata: Metadata = {
title: 'React App',
description: 'Web site created with Next.js.',
}
export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
export const metadata = {
title: 'React App',
description: 'Web site created with Next.js.',
}
export default function RootLayout({ children }) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
With the above changes, you shifted from declaring everything in your index.html to using Next.js' convention-based approach built into the framework (Metadata API). This approach enables you to more easily improve your SEO and web shareability of your pages.
Like CRA, Next.js supports CSS Modules out of the box. It also supports global CSS imports.
If you have a global CSS file, import it into your app/layout.tsx:
import '../index.css'
export const metadata = {
title: 'React App',
description: 'Web site created with Next.js.',
}
export default function RootLayout({
children,
}: {
children: React.ReactNode
}) {
return (
<html lang="en">
<body>
<div id="root">{children}</div>
</body>
</html>
)
}
If you're using Tailwind CSS, see our installation docs.
Create React App uses src/index.tsx (or index.js) as the entry point. In Next.js (App Router), each folder inside the app directory corresponds to a route, and each folder should have a page.tsx.
Since we want to keep the app as an SPA for now and intercept all routes, weβll use an optional catch-all route.
[[...slug]] directory inside app.app
β£ [[...slug]]
β β page.tsx
β£ layout.tsx
page.tsx:export function generateStaticParams() {
return [{ slug: [''] }]
}
export default function Page() {
return '...' // We'll update this
}
export function generateStaticParams() {
return [{ slug: [''] }]
}
export default function Page() {
return '...' // We'll update this
}
This tells Next.js to generate a single route for the empty slug (/), effectively mapping all routes to the same page. This page is a Server Component, prerendered into static HTML.
Next, weβll embed your CRAβs root App component inside a Client Component so that all logic remains client-side. If this is your first time using Next.js, it's worth knowing that clients components (by default) are still prerendered on the server. You can think about them as having the additional capability of running client-side JavaScript.
Create a client.tsx (or client.js) in app/[[...slug]]/:
'use client'
import dynamic from 'next/dynamic'
const App = dynamic(() => import('../../App'), { ssr: false })
export function ClientOnly() {
return <App />
}
'use client'
import dynamic from 'next/dynamic'
const App = dynamic(() => import('../../App'), { ssr: false })
export function ClientOnly() {
return <App />
}
'use client' directive makes this file a Client Component.dynamic import with ssr: false disables server-side rendering for the <App /> component, making it truly client-only (SPA).Now update your page.tsx (or page.js) to use your new component:
import { ClientOnly } from './client'
export function generateStaticParams() {
return [{ slug: [''] }]
}
export default function Page() {
return <ClientOnly />
}
import { ClientOnly } from './client'
export function generateStaticParams() {
return [{ slug: [''] }]
}
export default function Page() {
return <ClientOnly />
}
In CRA, importing an image file returns its public URL as a string:
import image from './img.png'
export default function App() {
return <img src={image} />
}
With Next.js, static image imports return an object. The object can then be used directly with the Next.js <Image> component, or you can use the object's src property with your existing <img> tag.
The <Image> component has the added benefits of automatic image optimization. The <Image> component automatically sets the width and height attributes of the resulting <img> based on the image's dimensions. This prevents layout shifts when the image loads. However, this can cause issues if your app contains images with only one of their dimensions being styled without the other styled to auto. When not styled to auto, the dimension will default to the <img> dimension attribute's value, which can cause the image to appear distorted.
Keeping the <img> tag will reduce the amount of changes in your application and prevent the above issues. You can then optionally later migrate to the <Image> component to take advantage of optimizing images by configuring a loader, or moving to the default Next.js server which has automatic image optimization.
Convert absolute import paths for images imported from /public into relative imports:
// Before
import logo from '/logo.png'
// After
import logo from '../public/logo.png'
Pass the image src property instead of the whole image object to your <img> tag:
// Before
<img src={logo} />
// After
<img src={logo.src} />
Alternatively, you can reference the public URL for the image asset based on the filename. For example, public/logo.png will serve the image at /logo.png for your application, which would be the src value.
Warning: If you're using TypeScript, you might encounter type errors when accessing the
srcproperty. To fix them, you need to addnext-env.d.tsto theincludearray of yourtsconfig.jsonfile. Next.js will automatically generate this file when you run your application on step 9.
Next.js supports environment variables similarly to CRA but requires a NEXT_PUBLIC_ prefix for any variable you want to expose in the browser.
The main difference is the prefix used to expose environment variables on the client-side. Change all environment variables with the REACT_APP_ prefix to NEXT_PUBLIC_.
package.jsonUpdate your package.json scripts to use Next.js commands. Also, add .next and next-env.d.ts to your .gitignore:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "next dev",
"build": "next build",
"start": "npx serve@latest ./build"
}
}
# ...
.next
next-env.d.ts
Now you can run:
npm run dev
Open http://localhost:3000. You should see your application now running on Next.js (in SPA mode).
You can now remove artifacts that are specific to Create React App:
public/index.htmlsrc/index.tsxsrc/react-app-env.d.tsreportWebVitals setupreact-scripts dependency (uninstall it from package.json)homepage in CRAIf you used the homepage field in your CRA package.json to serve the app under a specific subpath, you can replicate that in Next.js using the basePath configuration in next.config.ts:
import { NextConfig } from 'next'
const nextConfig: NextConfig = {
basePath: '/my-subpath',
// ...
}
export default nextConfig
Service WorkerIf you used CRAβs service worker (e.g., serviceWorker.js from create-react-app), you can learn how to create Progressive Web Applications (PWAs) with Next.js.
If your CRA app used the proxy field in package.json to forward requests to a backend server, you can replicate this with Next.js rewrites in next.config.ts:
import { NextConfig } from 'next'
const nextConfig: NextConfig = {
async rewrites() {
return [
{
source: '/api/:path*',
destination: 'https://your-backend.com/:path*',
},
]
},
}
If you had a custom webpack or Babel configuration in CRA, you can extend Next.jsβs config in next.config.ts:
import { NextConfig } from 'next'
const nextConfig: NextConfig = {
webpack: (config, { isServer }) => {
// Modify the webpack config here
return config
},
}
export default nextConfig
Note: This will require using Webpack by adding
--webpackto yourdevscript.
Next.js automatically sets up TypeScript if you have a tsconfig.json. Make sure next-env.d.ts is listed in your tsconfig.json include array:
{
"include": ["next-env.d.ts", "app/**/*", "src/**/*"]
}
Create React App uses webpack for bundling. Next.js now defaults to Turbopack for faster local development:
next dev # Uses Turbopack by default
To use Webpack instead (similar to CRA):
next dev --webpack
You can still provide a custom webpack configuration if you need to migrate advanced webpack settings from CRA.
If everything worked, you now have a functioning Next.js application running as a single-page application. You arenβt yet leveraging Next.js features like server-side rendering or file-based routing, but you can now do so incrementally:
<Image> componentnext/font<Script> componentNote: Using a static export (
output: 'export') does not currently support theuseParamshook or other server features. To use all Next.js features, removeoutput: 'export'from yournext.config.ts.
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