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Setting up Cypress with Next.js

Cypress is a test runner used for End-to-End (E2E) and Component Testing. This page will show you how to set up Cypress with Next.js and write your first tests.

Warning:

  • For component testing, Cypress currently does not support Next.js version 14 and async Server Components. These issues are being tracked. For now, component testing works with Next.js version 13, and we recommend E2E testing for async Server Components.
  • Cypress versions below 13.6.3 do not support TypeScript version 5 with moduleResolution:"bundler". However, this issue has been resolved in Cypress version 13.6.3 and later. cypress v13.6.3

Quickstart

You can use create-next-app with the with-cypress example to quickly get started.

Terminal
npx create-next-app@latest --example with-cypress with-cypress-app

Manual setup

To manually set up Cypress, install cypress as a dev dependency:

Terminal
npm install -D cypress
# or
yarn add -D cypress
# or
pnpm install -D cypress

Add the Cypress open command to the package.json scripts field:

package.json
{
  "scripts": {
    "dev": "next dev",
    "build": "next build",
    "start": "next start",
    "lint": "next lint",
    "cypress:open": "cypress open"
  }
}

Run Cypress for the first time to open the Cypress testing suite:

Terminal
npm run cypress:open

You can choose to configure E2E Testing and/or Component Testing. Selecting any of these options will automatically create a cypress.config.js file and a cypress folder in your project.

Creating your first Cypress E2E test

Ensure your cypress.config.js file has the following configuration:

cypress.config.ts
import { defineConfig } from 'cypress'
 
export default defineConfig({
  e2e: {
    setupNodeEvents(on, config) {},
  },
})
cypress.config.js
const { defineConfig } = require('cypress')
 
module.exports = defineConfig({
  e2e: {
    setupNodeEvents(on, config) {},
  },
})

Then, create two new Next.js files:

app/page.js
import Link from 'next/link'
 
export default function Page() {
  return (
    <div>
      <h1>Home</h1>
      <Link href="/about">About</Link>
    </div>
  )
}
app/about/page.js
import Link from 'next/link'
 
export default function Page() {
  return (
    <div>
      <h1>About</h1>
      <Link href="/">Home</Link>
    </div>
  )
}

Add a test to check your navigation is working correctly:

cypress/e2e/app.cy.js
describe('Navigation', () => {
  it('should navigate to the about page', () => {
    // Start from the index page
    cy.visit('http://localhost:3000/')
 
    // Find a link with an href attribute containing "about" and click it
    cy.get('a[href*="about"]').click()
 
    // The new url should include "/about"
    cy.url().should('include', '/about')
 
    // The new page should contain an h1 with "About"
    cy.get('h1').contains('About')
  })
})

Running E2E Tests

Cypress will simulate a user navigating your application, this requires your Next.js server to be running. We recommend running your tests against your production code to more closely resemble how your application will behave.

Run npm run build && npm run start to build your Next.js application, then run npm run cypress:open in another terminal window to start Cypress and run your E2E testing suite.

Good to know:

  • You can use cy.visit("/") instead of cy.visit("http://localhost:3000/") by adding baseUrl: 'http://localhost:3000' to the cypress.config.js configuration file.
  • Alternatively, you can install the start-server-and-test package to run the Next.js production server in conjunction with Cypress. After installation, add "test": "start-server-and-test start http://localhost:3000 cypress" to your package.json scripts field. Remember to rebuild your application after new changes.

Creating your first Cypress component test

Component tests build and mount a specific component without having to bundle your whole application or start a server.

Select Component Testing in the Cypress app, then select Next.js as your front-end framework. A cypress/component folder will be created in your project, and a cypress.config.js file will be updated to enable component testing.

Ensure your cypress.config.js file has the following configuration:

cypress.config.ts
import { defineConfig } from 'cypress'
 
export default defineConfig({
  component: {
    devServer: {
      framework: 'next',
      bundler: 'webpack',
    },
  },
})
cypress.config.js
const { defineConfig } = require('cypress')
 
module.exports = defineConfig({
  component: {
    devServer: {
      framework: 'next',
      bundler: 'webpack',
    },
  },
})

Assuming the same components from the previous section, add a test to validate a component is rendering the expected output:

cypress/component/about.cy.tsx
import Page from '../../app/page'
 
describe('<Page />', () => {
  it('should render and display expected content', () => {
    // Mount the React component for the Home page
    cy.mount(<Page />)
 
    // The new page should contain an h1 with "Home"
    cy.get('h1').contains('Home')
 
    // Validate that a link with the expected URL is present
    // Following the link is better suited to an E2E test
    cy.get('a[href="/about"]').should('be.visible')
  })
})

Good to know:

  • Cypress currently doesn't support component testing for async Server Components. We recommend using E2E testing.
  • Since component tests do not require a Next.js server, features like <Image /> that rely on a server being available may not function out-of-the-box.

Running Component Tests

Run npm run cypress:open in your terminal to start Cypress and run your component testing suite.

Continuous Integration (CI)

In addition to interactive testing, you can also run Cypress headlessly using the cypress run command, which is better suited for CI environments:

package.json
{
  "scripts": {
    //...
    "e2e": "start-server-and-test dev http://localhost:3000 \"cypress open --e2e\"",
    "e2e:headless": "start-server-and-test dev http://localhost:3000 \"cypress run --e2e\"",
    "component": "cypress open --component",
    "component:headless": "cypress run --component"
  }
}

You can learn more about Cypress and Continuous Integration from these resources: