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Caching in Next.js

Next.js improves your application's performance and reduces costs by caching rendering work and data requests. This page provides an in-depth look at Next.js caching mechanisms, the APIs you can use to configure them, and how they interact with each other.

Good to know: This page helps you understand how Next.js works under the hood but is not essential knowledge to be productive with Next.js. Most of Next.js' caching heuristics are determined by your API usage and have defaults for the best performance with zero or minimal configuration. If you instead want to jump to examples, start here.

Overview

Here's a high-level overview of the different caching mechanisms and their purpose:

MechanismWhatWherePurposeDuration
Request MemoizationReturn values of functionsServerRe-use data in a React Component treePer-request lifecycle
Data CacheDataServerStore data across user requests and deploymentsPersistent (can be revalidated)
Full Route CacheHTML and RSC payloadServerReduce rendering cost and improve performancePersistent (can be revalidated)
Router CacheRSC PayloadClientReduce server requests on navigationUser session or time-based

By default, Next.js will cache as much as possible to improve performance and reduce cost. This means routes are statically rendered and data requests are cached unless you opt out. The diagram below shows the default caching behavior: when a route is statically rendered at build time and when a static route is first visited.

Diagram showing the default caching behavior in Next.js for the four mechanisms, with HIT, MISS and SET at build time and when a route is first visited.

Caching behavior changes depending on whether the route is statically or dynamically rendered, data is cached or uncached, and whether a request is part of an initial visit or a subsequent navigation. Depending on your use case, you can configure the caching behavior for individual routes and data requests.

Request Memoization

React extends the fetch API to automatically memoize requests that have the same URL and options. This means you can call a fetch function for the same data in multiple places in a React component tree while only executing it once.

Deduplicated Fetch Requests

For example, if you need to use the same data across a route (e.g. in a Layout, Page, and multiple components), you do not have to fetch data at the top of the tree, and forward props between components. Instead, you can fetch data in the components that need it without worrying about the performance implications of making multiple requests across the network for the same data.

app/example.tsx
async function getItem() {
  // The `fetch` function is automatically memoized and the result
  // is cached
  const res = await fetch('https://.../item/1')
  return res.json()
}
 
// This function is called twice, but only executed the first time
const item = await getItem() // cache MISS
 
// The second call could be anywhere in your route
const item = await getItem() // cache HIT

How Request Memoization Works

Diagram showing how fetch memoization works during React rendering.
  • While rendering a route, the first time a particular request is called, its result will not be in memory and it'll be a cache MISS.
  • Therefore, the function will be executed, and the data will be fetched from the external source, and the result will be stored in memory.
  • Subsequent function calls of the request in the same render pass will be a cache HIT, and the data will be returned from memory without executing the function.
  • Once the route has been rendered and the rendering pass is complete, memory is "reset" and all request memoization entries are cleared.

Good to know:

  • Request memoization is a React feature, not a Next.js feature. It's included here to show how it interacts with the other caching mechanisms.
  • Memoization only applies to the GET method in fetch requests.
  • Memoization only applies to the React Component tree, this means:
    • It applies to fetch requests in generateMetadata, generateStaticParams, Layouts, Pages, and other Server Components.
    • It doesn't apply to fetch requests in Route Handlers as they are not a part of the React component tree.
  • For cases where fetch is not suitable (e.g. some database clients, CMS clients, or GraphQL clients), you can use the React cache function to memoize functions.

Duration

The cache lasts the lifetime of a server request until the React component tree has finished rendering.

Revalidating

Since the memoization is not shared across server requests and only applies during rendering, there is no need to revalidate it.

Opting out

Memoization only applies to the GET method in fetch requests, other methods, such as POST and DELETE, are not memoized. This default behavior is a React optimization and we do not recommend opting out of it.

To manage individual requests, you can use the signal property from AbortController. However, this will not opt requests out of memoization, rather, abort in-flight requests.

app/example.js
const { signal } = new AbortController()
fetch(url, { signal })

Data Cache

Next.js has a built-in Data Cache that persists the result of data fetches across incoming server requests and deployments. This is possible because Next.js extends the native fetch API to allow each request on the server to set its own persistent caching semantics.

Good to know: In the browser, the cache option of fetch indicates how a request will interact with the browser's HTTP cache, in Next.js, the cache option indicates how a server-side request will interact with the server's Data Cache.

You can use the cache and next.revalidate options of fetch to configure the caching behavior.

How the Data Cache Works

Diagram showing how cached and uncached fetch requests interact with the Data Cache. Cached requests are stored in the Data Cache, and memoized, uncached requests are fetched from the data source, not stored in the Data Cache, and memoized.
  • The first time a fetch request with the 'force-cache' option is called during rendering, Next.js checks the Data Cache for a cached response.
  • If a cached response is found, it's returned immediately and memoized.
  • If a cached response is not found, the request is made to the data source, the result is stored in the Data Cache, and memoized.
  • For uncached data (e.g. no cache option defined or using { cache: 'no-store' }), the result is always fetched from the data source, and memoized.
  • Whether the data is cached or uncached, the requests are always memoized to avoid making duplicate requests for the same data during a React render pass.

Differences between the Data Cache and Request Memoization

While both caching mechanisms help improve performance by re-using cached data, the Data Cache is persistent across incoming requests and deployments, whereas memoization only lasts the lifetime of a request.

Duration

The Data Cache is persistent across incoming requests and deployments unless you revalidate or opt-out.

Revalidating

Cached data can be revalidated in two ways, with:

  • Time-based Revalidation: Revalidate data after a certain amount of time has passed and a new request is made. This is useful for data that changes infrequently and freshness is not as critical.
  • On-demand Revalidation: Revalidate data based on an event (e.g. form submission). On-demand revalidation can use a tag-based or path-based approach to revalidate groups of data at once. This is useful when you want to ensure the latest data is shown as soon as possible (e.g. when content from your headless CMS is updated).

Time-based Revalidation

To revalidate data at a timed interval, you can use the next.revalidate option of fetch to set the cache lifetime of a resource (in seconds).

// Revalidate at most every hour
fetch('https://...', { next: { revalidate: 3600 } })

Alternatively, you can use Route Segment Config options to configure all fetch requests in a segment or for cases where you're not able to use fetch.

How Time-based Revalidation Works

Diagram showing how time-based revalidation works, after the revalidation period, stale data is returned for the first request, then data is revalidated.
  • The first time a fetch request with revalidate is called, the data will be fetched from the external data source and stored in the Data Cache.
  • Any requests that are called within the specified timeframe (e.g. 60-seconds) will return the cached data.
  • After the timeframe, the next request will still return the cached (now stale) data.
    • Next.js will trigger a revalidation of the data in the background.
    • Once the data is fetched successfully, Next.js will update the Data Cache with the fresh data.
    • If the background revalidation fails, the previous data will be kept unaltered.

This is similar to stale-while-revalidate behavior.

On-demand Revalidation

Data can be revalidated on-demand by path (revalidatePath) or by cache tag (revalidateTag).

How On-Demand Revalidation Works

Diagram showing how on-demand revalidation works, the Data Cache is updated with fresh data after a revalidation request.
  • The first time a fetch request is called, the data will be fetched from the external data source and stored in the Data Cache.
  • When an on-demand revalidation is triggered, the appropriate cache entries will be purged from the cache.
    • This is different from time-based revalidation, which keeps the stale data in the cache until the fresh data is fetched.
  • The next time a request is made, it will be a cache MISS again, and the data will be fetched from the external data source and stored in the Data Cache.

Opting out

If you do not want to cache the response from fetch, you can do the following:

let data = await fetch('https://api.vercel.app/blog', { cache: 'no-store' })

Full Route Cache

Related terms:

You may see the terms Automatic Static Optimization, Static Site Generation, or Static Rendering being used interchangeably to refer to the process of rendering and caching routes of your application at build time.

Next.js automatically renders and caches routes at build time. This is an optimization that allows you to serve the cached route instead of rendering on the server for every request, resulting in faster page loads.

To understand how the Full Route Cache works, it's helpful to look at how React handles rendering, and how Next.js caches the result:

1. React Rendering on the Server

On the server, Next.js uses React's APIs to orchestrate rendering. The rendering work is split into chunks: by individual routes segments and Suspense boundaries.

Each chunk is rendered in two steps:

  1. React renders Server Components into a special data format, optimized for streaming, called the React Server Component Payload.
  2. Next.js uses the React Server Component Payload and Client Component JavaScript instructions to render HTML on the server.

This means we don't have to wait for everything to render before caching the work or sending a response. Instead, we can stream a response as work is completed.

What is the React Server Component Payload?

The React Server Component Payload is a compact binary representation of the rendered React Server Components tree. It's used by React on the client to update the browser's DOM. The React Server Component Payload contains:

  • The rendered result of Server Components
  • Placeholders for where Client Components should be rendered and references to their JavaScript files
  • Any props passed from a Server Component to a Client Component

To learn more, see the Server Components documentation.

2. Next.js Caching on the Server (Full Route Cache)

Default behavior of the Full Route Cache, showing how the React Server Component Payload and HTML are cached on the server for statically rendered routes.

The default behavior of Next.js is to cache the rendered result (React Server Component Payload and HTML) of a route on the server. This applies to statically rendered routes at build time, or during revalidation.

3. React Hydration and Reconciliation on the Client

At request time, on the client:

  1. The HTML is used to immediately show a fast non-interactive initial preview of the Client and Server Components.
  2. The React Server Components Payload is used to reconcile the Client and rendered Server Component trees, and update the DOM.
  3. The JavaScript instructions are used to hydrate Client Components and make the application interactive.

4. Next.js Caching on the Client (Router Cache)

The React Server Component Payload is stored in the client-side Router Cache - a separate in-memory cache, split by individual route segment. This Router Cache is used to improve the navigation experience by storing previously visited routes and prefetching future routes.

5. Subsequent Navigations

On subsequent navigations or during prefetching, Next.js will check if the React Server Components Payload is stored in the Router Cache. If so, it will skip sending a new request to the server.

If the route segments are not in the cache, Next.js will fetch the React Server Components Payload from the server, and populate the Router Cache on the client.

Static and Dynamic Rendering

Whether a route is cached or not at build time depends on whether it's statically or dynamically rendered. Static routes are cached by default, whereas dynamic routes are rendered at request time, and not cached.

This diagram shows the difference between statically and dynamically rendered routes, with cached and uncached data:

How static and dynamic rendering affects the Full Route Cache. Static routes are cached at build time or after data revalidation, whereas dynamic routes are never cached

Learn more about static and dynamic rendering.

Duration

By default, the Full Route Cache is persistent. This means that the render output is cached across user requests.

Invalidation

There are two ways you can invalidate the Full Route Cache:

  • Revalidating Data: Revalidating the Data Cache, will in turn invalidate the Router Cache by re-rendering components on the server and caching the new render output.
  • Redeploying: Unlike the Data Cache, which persists across deployments, the Full Route Cache is cleared on new deployments.

Opting out

You can opt out of the Full Route Cache, or in other words, dynamically render components for every incoming request, by:

  • Using a Dynamic API: This will opt the route out from the Full Route Cache and dynamically render it at request time. The Data Cache can still be used.
  • Using the dynamic = 'force-dynamic' or revalidate = 0 route segment config options: This will skip the Full Route Cache and the Data Cache. Meaning components will be rendered and data fetched on every incoming request to the server. The Router Cache will still apply as it's a client-side cache.
  • Opting out of the Data Cache: If a route has a fetch request that is not cached, this will opt the route out of the Full Route Cache. The data for the specific fetch request will be fetched for every incoming request. Other fetch requests that do not opt out of caching will still be cached in the Data Cache. This allows for a hybrid of cached and uncached data.

Client-side Router Cache

Next.js has an in-memory client-side router cache that stores the RSC payload of route segments, split by layouts, loading states, and pages.

When a user navigates between routes, Next.js caches the visited route segments and prefetches the routes the user is likely to navigate to. This results in instant back/forward navigation, no full-page reload between navigations, and preservation of React state and browser state.

With the Router Cache:

  • Layouts are cached and reused on navigation (partial rendering).
  • Loading states are cached and reused on navigation for instant navigation.
  • Pages are not cached by default, but are reused during browser backward and forward navigation. You can enable caching for page segments by using the experimental staleTimes config option.

Good to know: This cache specifically applies to Next.js and Server Components, and is different to the browser's bfcache, though it has a similar result.

Duration

The cache is stored in the browser's temporary memory. Two factors determine how long the router cache lasts:

  • Session: The cache persists across navigation. However, it's cleared on page refresh.
  • Automatic Invalidation Period: The cache of layouts and loading states is automatically invalidated after a specific time. The duration depends on how the resource was prefetched, and if the resource was statically generated:
    • Default Prefetching (prefetch={null} or unspecified): not cached for dynamic pages, 5 minutes for static pages.
    • Full Prefetching (prefetch={true} or router.prefetch): 5 minutes for both static & dynamic pages.

While a page refresh will clear all cached segments, the automatic invalidation period only affects the individual segment from the time it was prefetched.

Good to know: The experimental staleTimes config option can be used to adjust the automatic invalidation times mentioned above.

Invalidation

There are two ways you can invalidate the Router Cache:

  • In a Server Action:
  • Calling router.refresh will invalidate the Router Cache and make a new request to the server for the current route.

Opting out

As of Next.js 15, page segments are opted out by default.

Good to know: You can also opt out of prefetching by setting the prefetch prop of the <Link> component to false.

Cache Interactions

When configuring the different caching mechanisms, it's important to understand how they interact with each other:

Data Cache and Full Route Cache

  • Revalidating or opting out of the Data Cache will invalidate the Full Route Cache, as the render output depends on data.
  • Invalidating or opting out of the Full Route Cache does not affect the Data Cache. You can dynamically render a route that has both cached and uncached data. This is useful when most of your page uses cached data, but you have a few components that rely on data that needs to be fetched at request time. You can dynamically render without worrying about the performance impact of re-fetching all the data.

Data Cache and Client-side Router cache

  • To immediately invalidate the Data Cache and Router cache, you can use revalidatePath or revalidateTag in a Server Action.
  • Revalidating the Data Cache in a Route Handler will not immediately invalidate the Router Cache as the Route Handler isn't tied to a specific route. This means Router Cache will continue to serve the previous payload until a hard refresh, or the automatic invalidation period has elapsed.

APIs

The following table provides an overview of how different Next.js APIs affect caching:

APIRouter CacheFull Route CacheData CacheReact Cache
<Link prefetch>Cache
router.prefetchCache
router.refreshRevalidate
fetchCacheCache
fetch options.cacheCache or Opt out
fetch options.next.revalidateRevalidateRevalidate
fetch options.next.tagsCacheCache
revalidateTagRevalidate (Server Action)RevalidateRevalidate
revalidatePathRevalidate (Server Action)RevalidateRevalidate
const revalidateRevalidate or Opt outRevalidate or Opt out
const dynamicCache or Opt outCache or Opt out
cookiesRevalidate (Server Action)Opt out
headers, searchParamsOpt out
generateStaticParamsCache
React.cacheCache
unstable_cacheCache

By default, the <Link> component automatically prefetches routes from the Full Route Cache and adds the React Server Component Payload to the Router Cache.

To disable prefetching, you can set the prefetch prop to false. But this will not skip the cache permanently, the route segment will still be cached client-side when the user visits the route.

Learn more about the <Link> component.

router.prefetch

The prefetch option of the useRouter hook can be used to manually prefetch a route. This adds the React Server Component Payload to the Router Cache.

See the useRouter hook API reference.

router.refresh

The refresh option of the useRouter hook can be used to manually refresh a route. This completely clears the Router Cache, and makes a new request to the server for the current route. refresh does not affect the Data or Full Route Cache.

The rendered result will be reconciled on the client while preserving React state and browser state.

See the useRouter hook API reference.

fetch

Data returned from fetch is not automatically cached in the Data Cache.

The default caching behavior of fetch (e.g., when the cache option is not specified) is equal to setting the cache option to no-store:

let data = await fetch('https://api.vercel.app/blog', { cache: 'no-store' })

See the fetch API Reference for more options.

fetch options.cache

You can opt individual fetch into caching by setting the cache option to force-cache:

// Opt into caching
fetch(`https://...`, { cache: 'force-cache' })

See the fetch API Reference for more options.

fetch options.next.revalidate

You can use the next.revalidate option of fetch to set the revalidation period (in seconds) of an individual fetch request. This will revalidate the Data Cache, which in turn will revalidate the Full Route Cache. Fresh data will be fetched, and components will be re-rendered on the server.

// Revalidate at most after 1 hour
fetch(`https://...`, { next: { revalidate: 3600 } })

See the fetch API reference for more options.

fetch options.next.tags and revalidateTag

Next.js has a cache tagging system for fine-grained data caching and revalidation.

  1. When using fetch or unstable_cache, you have the option to tag cache entries with one or more tags.
  2. Then, you can call revalidateTag to purge the cache entries associated with that tag.

For example, you can set a tag when fetching data:

// Cache data with a tag
fetch(`https://...`, { next: { tags: ['a', 'b', 'c'] } })

Then, call revalidateTag with a tag to purge the cache entry:

// Revalidate entries with a specific tag
revalidateTag('a')

There are two places you can use revalidateTag, depending on what you're trying to achieve:

  1. Route Handlers - to revalidate data in response of a third party event (e.g. webhook). This will not invalidate the Router Cache immediately as the Router Handler isn't tied to a specific route.
  2. Server Actions - to revalidate data after a user action (e.g. form submission). This will invalidate the Router Cache for the associated route.

revalidatePath

revalidatePath allows you manually revalidate data and re-render the route segments below a specific path in a single operation. Calling the revalidatePath method revalidates the Data Cache, which in turn invalidates the Full Route Cache.

revalidatePath('/')

There are two places you can use revalidatePath, depending on what you're trying to achieve:

  1. Route Handlers - to revalidate data in response to a third party event (e.g. webhook).
  2. Server Actions - to revalidate data after a user interaction (e.g. form submission, clicking a button).

See the revalidatePath API reference for more information.

revalidatePath vs. router.refresh:

Calling router.refresh will clear the Router cache, and re-render route segments on the server without invalidating the Data Cache or the Full Route Cache.

The difference is that revalidatePath purges the Data Cache and Full Route Cache, whereas router.refresh() does not change the Data Cache and Full Route Cache, as it is a client-side API.

Dynamic APIs

Dynamic APIs like cookies and headers, and the searchParams prop in Pages depend on runtime incoming request information. Using them will opt a route out of the Full Route Cache, in other words, the route will be dynamically rendered.

cookies

Using cookies.set or cookies.delete in a Server Action invalidates the Router Cache to prevent routes that use cookies from becoming stale (e.g. to reflect authentication changes).

See the cookies API reference.

Segment Config Options

The Route Segment Config options can be used to override the route segment defaults or when you're not able to use the fetch API (e.g. database client or 3rd party libraries).

The following Route Segment Config options will opt out of the Full Route Cache:

  • const dynamic = 'force-dynamic'

This config option will opt all fetches out of the Data Cache (i.e. no-store):

  • const fetchCache = 'default-no-store'

See the fetchCache to see more advanced options.

See the Route Segment Config documentation for more options.

generateStaticParams

For dynamic segments (e.g. app/blog/[slug]/page.js), paths provided by generateStaticParams are cached in the Full Route Cache at build time. At request time, Next.js will also cache paths that weren't known at build time the first time they're visited.

To statically render all paths at build time, supply the full list of paths to generateStaticParams:

app/blog/[slug]/page.js
export async function generateStaticParams() {
  const posts = await fetch('https://.../posts').then((res) => res.json())
 
  return posts.map((post) => ({
    slug: post.slug,
  }))
}

To statically render a subset of paths at build time, and the rest the first time they're visited at runtime, return a partial list of paths:

app/blog/[slug]/page.js
export async function generateStaticParams() {
  const posts = await fetch('https://.../posts').then((res) => res.json())
 
  // Render the first 10 posts at build time
  return posts.slice(0, 10).map((post) => ({
    slug: post.slug,
  }))
}

To statically render all paths the first time they're visited, return an empty array (no paths will be rendered at build time) or utilize export const dynamic = 'force-static':

app/blog/[slug]/page.js
export async function generateStaticParams() {
  return []
}

Good to know: You must return an array from generateStaticParams, even if it's empty. Otherwise, the route will be dynamically rendered.

app/changelog/[slug]/page.js
export const dynamic = 'force-static'

To disable caching at request time, add the export const dynamicParams = false option in a route segment. When this config option is used, only paths provided by generateStaticParams will be served, and other routes will 404 or match (in the case of catch-all routes).

React cache function

The React cache function allows you to memoize the return value of a function, allowing you to call the same function multiple times while only executing it once.

Since fetch requests are automatically memoized, you do not need to wrap it in React cache. However, you can use cache to manually memoize data requests for use cases when the fetch API is not suitable. For example, some database clients, CMS clients, or GraphQL clients.

utils/get-item.ts
import { cache } from 'react'
import db from '@/lib/db'
 
export const getItem = cache(async (id: string) => {
  const item = await db.item.findUnique({ id })
  return item
})