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Tailwind CSS

Examples

Tailwind CSS is a utility-first CSS framework that works exceptionally well with Next.js.

Installing Tailwind

Install the Tailwind CSS packages and run the init command to generate both the tailwind.config.js and postcss.config.js files:

Terminal
npm install -D tailwindcss postcss autoprefixer
npx tailwindcss init -p

Configuring Tailwind

Inside your Tailwind configuration file, add paths to the files that will use Tailwind class names:

tailwind.config.ts
import type { Config } from 'tailwindcss'
 
const config: Config = {
  content: [
    './app/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}', // Note the addition of the `app` directory.
    './pages/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}',
    './components/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}',
 
    // Or if using `src` directory:
    './src/**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,mdx}',
  ],
  theme: {
    extend: {},
  },
  plugins: [],
}
export default config

You do not need to modify postcss.config.js.

Importing Styles

Add the Tailwind CSS directives that Tailwind will use to inject its generated styles to a Global Stylesheet in your application, for example:

styles/globals.css
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;

Inside the custom app file (pages/_app.js), import the globals.css stylesheet to apply the styles to every route in your application.

pages/_app.tsx
// These styles apply to every route in the application
import '@/styles/globals.css'
import type { AppProps } from 'next/app'
 
export default function App({ Component, pageProps }: AppProps) {
  return <Component {...pageProps} />
}

Using Classes

After installing Tailwind CSS and adding the global styles, you can use Tailwind's utility classes in your application.

pages/index.tsx
export default function Page() {
  return <h1 className="text-3xl font-bold underline">Hello, Next.js!</h1>
}

Usage with Turbopack

As of Next.js 13.1, Tailwind CSS and PostCSS are supported with Turbopack.