You are currently viewing documentation for version 14 of Next.js.
Static Assets
Next.js can serve static files, like images, under a folder called public
in the root directory. Files inside public
can then be referenced by your code starting from the base URL (/
).
For example, the file public/avatars/me.png
can be viewed by visiting the /avatars/me.png
path. The code to display that image might look like:
avatar.js
import Image from 'next/image'
export function Avatar({ id, alt }) {
return <Image src={`/avatars/${id}.png`} alt={alt} width="64" height="64" />
}
export function AvatarOfMe() {
return <Avatar id="me" alt="A portrait of me" />
}
Caching
Next.js cannot safely cache assets in the public
folder because they may change. The default caching headers applied are:
Cache-Control: public, max-age=0
Robots, Favicons, and others
The folder is also useful for robots.txt
, favicon.ico
, Google Site Verification, and any other static files (including .html
). But make sure to not have a static file with the same name as a file in the pages/
directory, as this will result in an error. Read more.
Good to know:
- The directory must be named
public
. The name cannot be changed and it's the only directory used to serve static assets.- Only assets that are in the
public
directory at build time will be served by Next.js. Files added at request time won't be available. We recommend using a third-party service like Vercel Blob for persistent file storage.
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