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useParams

useParams is a hook that lets you read a route's dynamic params filled in by the current URL.

pages/shop/[slug].tsx
import { useParams } from 'next/navigation'
 
export default function ShopPage() {
  const params = useParams<{ slug: string }>()
 
  if (!params) {
    // Render fallback UI while params are not yet available
    return null
  }
 
  // Route -> /shop/[slug]
  // URL -> /shop/shoes
  // `params` -> { slug: 'shoes' }
  return <>Shop: {params.slug}</>
}

Parameters

const params = useParams()

useParams does not take any parameters.

Returns

useParams returns an object containing the current route's filled in dynamic parameters, or null during pre-rendering.

  • Each property in the object is an active dynamic segment.
  • The property name is the segment's name, and the property value is what the segment is filled in with.
  • The property value will either be a string or array of strings depending on the type of dynamic segment.
  • If the route contains no dynamic parameters, useParams returns an empty object.

For example:

RouteURLuseParams()
pages/shop/page.js/shop{}
pages/shop/[slug].js/shop/1{ slug: '1' }
pages/shop/[tag]/[item].js/shop/1/2{ tag: '1', item: '2' }
pages/shop/[...slug].js/shop/1/2{ slug: ['1', '2'] }

Good to know: useParams is a React Hook and cannot be used with classes.

Behavior

Behavior during pre-rendering

For pages that are statically optimized, useParams will return null on the initial render. After hydration, the value will be updated to the actual params once the router is ready.

This is because params cannot be known during static generation for dynamic routes.

pages/shop/[slug].tsx
import { useParams } from 'next/navigation'
 
export default function ShopPage() {
  const params = useParams<{ slug: string }>()
 
  if (!params) {
    // Return a fallback UI while params are loading
    // This prevents hydration mismatches
    return <ShopPageSkeleton />
  }
 
  return <>Shop: {params.slug}</>
}

Using with getServerSideProps

When using getServerSideProps, the page is server-rendered on each request and useParams will return the actual params immediately:

pages/shop/[slug].tsx
import { useParams } from 'next/navigation'
 
export default function ShopPage() {
  const params = useParams<{ slug: string }>()
 
  // With getServerSideProps, this fallback is never rendered because
  // params is always available on the server. However, keeping
  // the fallback allows this component to be reused on other pages
  // that may not use getServerSideProps.
  if (!params) {
    return null
  }
 
  return <>Shop: {params.slug}</>
}
 
export async function getServerSideProps() {
  return { props: {} }
}

Comparison with router.query

useParams only returns the dynamic route parameters, whereas router.query from useRouter includes both dynamic parameters and query string parameters.

pages/shop/[slug].tsx
import { useRouter } from 'next/router'
import { useParams } from 'next/navigation'
 
export default function ShopPage() {
  const router = useRouter()
  const params = useParams()
 
  // URL -> /shop/shoes?color=red
 
  // router.query -> { slug: 'shoes', color: 'red' }
  // params -> { slug: 'shoes' }
 
  // ...
}

Examples

Sharing components with App Router

useParams from next/navigation works in both the Pages Router and App Router. This allows you to create shared components that work in either context:

components/breadcrumb.tsx
import { useParams } from 'next/navigation'
 
// This component works in both pages/ and app/
export function Breadcrumb() {
  const params = useParams<{ slug: string }>()
 
  if (!params) {
    // Fallback for Pages Router during pre-rendering
    return <nav>Home / ...</nav>
  }
 
  return <nav>Home / {params.slug}</nav>
}

Good to know: When using this component in the App Router, useParams never returns null, so the fallback branch will not be rendered.

Version History

VersionChanges
v13.3.0useParams introduced.

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