page.js
The page
file allows you to define UI that is unique to a route. You can create a page by default exporting a component from the file:
export default function Page({
params,
searchParams,
}: {
params: Promise<{ slug: string }>
searchParams: Promise<{ [key: string]: string | string[] | undefined }>
}) {
return <h1>My Page</h1>
}
Good to know
- The
.js
,.jsx
, or.tsx
file extensions can be used forpage
. - A
page
is always the leaf of the route subtree. - A
page
file is required to make a route segment publicly accessible. - Pages are Server Components by default, but can be set to a Client Component.
Reference
Props
params
(optional)
A promise that resolves to an object containing the dynamic route parameters from the root segment down to that page.
export default async function Page({
params,
}: {
params: Promise<{ slug: string }>
}) {
const { slug } = await params
}
Example Route | URL | params |
---|---|---|
app/shop/[slug]/page.js | /shop/1 | Promise<{ slug: '1' }> |
app/shop/[category]/[item]/page.js | /shop/1/2 | Promise<{ category: '1', item: '2' }> |
app/shop/[...slug]/page.js | /shop/1/2 | Promise<{ slug: ['1', '2'] }> |
- Since the
params
prop is a promise, you must useasync/await
or React'suse
function to access the values.- In version 14 and earlier,
params
was a synchronous prop. To help with backwards compatibility, you can still access it synchronously in Next.js 15, but this behavior will be deprecated in the future.
- In version 14 and earlier,
searchParams
(optional)
A promise that resolves to an object containing the search parameters of the current URL. For example:
export default async function Page({
searchParams,
}: {
searchParams: Promise<{ [key: string]: string | string[] | undefined }>
}) {
const filters = (await searchParams).filters
}
Client Component pages can also access searchParams
using React’s use
hook:
'use client'
import { use } from 'react'
export default function Page({
searchParams,
}: {
searchParams: Promise<{ [key: string]: string | string[] | undefined }>
}) {
const filters = use(searchParams).filters
}
Example URL | searchParams |
---|---|
/shop?a=1 | Promise<{ a: '1' }> |
/shop?a=1&b=2 | Promise<{ a: '1', b: '2' }> |
/shop?a=1&a=2 | Promise<{ a: ['1', '2'] }> |
- Since the
searchParams
prop is a promise. You must useasync/await
or React'suse
function to access the values.- In version 14 and earlier,
searchParams
was a synchronous prop. To help with backwards compatibility, you can still access it synchronously in Next.js 15, but this behavior will be deprecated in the future.
- In version 14 and earlier,
searchParams
is a Dynamic API whose values cannot be known ahead of time. Using it will opt the page into dynamic rendering at request time.searchParams
is a plain JavaScript object, not aURLSearchParams
instance.
Page Props Helper
You can type pages with PageProps
to get strongly typed params
and searchParams
from the route literal. PageProps
is a globally available helper.
export default async function Page(props: PageProps<'/blog/[slug]'>) {
const { slug } = await props.params
const query = await props.searchParams
return <h1>Blog Post: {slug}</h1>
}
Good to know
- Using a literal route (e.g.
'/blog/[slug]'
) enables autocomplete and strict keys forparams
.- Static routes resolve
params
to{}
.- Types are generated during
next dev
,next build
, or withnext typegen
.
Examples
Displaying content based on params
Using dynamic route segments, you can display or fetch specific content for the page based on the params
prop.
export default async function Page({
params,
}: {
params: Promise<{ slug: string }>
}) {
const { slug } = await params
return <h1>Blog Post: {slug}</h1>
}
Handling filtering with searchParams
You can use the searchParams
prop to handle filtering, pagination, or sorting based on the query string of the URL.
export default async function Page({
searchParams,
}: {
searchParams: Promise<{ [key: string]: string | string[] | undefined }>
}) {
const { page = '1', sort = 'asc', query = '' } = await searchParams
return (
<div>
<h1>Product Listing</h1>
<p>Search query: {query}</p>
<p>Current page: {page}</p>
<p>Sort order: {sort}</p>
</div>
)
}
Reading searchParams
and params
in Client Components
To use searchParams
and params
in a Client Component (which cannot be async
), you can use React's use
function to read the promise:
'use client'
import { use } from 'react'
export default function Page({
params,
searchParams,
}: {
params: Promise<{ slug: string }>
searchParams: Promise<{ [key: string]: string | string[] | undefined }>
}) {
const { slug } = use(params)
const { query } = use(searchParams)
}
Version History
Version | Changes |
---|---|
v15.0.0-RC | params and searchParams are now promises. A codemod is available. |
v13.0.0 | page introduced. |
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