Easily add animated transitions between pages using Next.js App Router and your favorite animation library.
- Live Demo using GSAP (source code: /example).
- Stackblitz Demo using Framer Motion.
- Automatically detect internal links to handle page transitions (optional
auto
flag). - Use a custom
Link
component to manually handle page transitions (whenauto
is disabled). - Exclusively to be used with Next.js App Router (v14.0.0 or higher).
- Quickly add animated transitions between pages using JavaScript or CSS.
- Integrate seamlessly with GSAP or any other animation library of your choice (see minimal GSAP example).
- If JavaScript is disabled, the router's accessibility is not compromised.
- It's really lightweight; the bundle size is less than 8 KB.
- Focused on customizable animations, not targeting the View Transitions API.
If you're looking to use the View Transitions API, check next-view-transitions.
Warning
This project is currently in Beta. Please note that the API may change as features are enhanced and refined.
Install the package using your preferred package manager:
pnpm add next-transition-router
yarn add next-transition-router
npm install next-transition-router
Create a client component (e.g.: app/providers.tsx
) to use the TransitionRouter
provider:
"use client";
import { TransitionRouter } from "next-transition-router";
export function Providers({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
return (
<TransitionRouter
leave={(next) => {
someAnimation().then(next);
}}
enter={(next) => {
anotherAnimation().then(next);
}}
>
{children}
</TransitionRouter>
);
}
Note
It should be a client component because you have to pass DOM functions as props to the provider.
After that, you should import that component in the layout component (e.g.: app/layout.tsx
).
The leave
and enter
callbacks support async functions.
"use client";
import { TransitionRouter } from "next-transition-router";
export function Providers({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
return (
<TransitionRouter
leave={async (next) => {
await someAsyncAnimation();
next();
}}
enter={async (next) => {
await anotherAsyncAnimation();
next();
}}
>
{children}
</TransitionRouter>
);
}
The leave
callback receives the from
and to
parameters, which are strings with the previous and next page paths. Useful if you want to animate the transition conditionally based on the page.
const onLeave = (next, from, to) => {
someAnimation(from, to).then(next);
};
Note
When using router.back()
method, the to
parameter will be undefined. See programmatic navigation.
To determine how to handle links, TransitionRouter
can receive an auto
prop (boolean
).
Use the custom Link
component instead of the native Link
component from Next.js to trigger transitions.
import { Link } from "next-transition-router";
export function Example() {
return <Link href="/about">About</Link>;
}
Tip
Use import { Link as TransitionLink } from "next-transition-router"
to avoid naming conflicts.
When auto
is enabled, the TransitionRouter
intercepts click events on internal links, except anchor links, and triggers page transitions. In this case you don't need to use the custom Link
component.
To ignore a link in this mode, simply add the data-transition-ignore
attribute to the link.
Use the useTransitionRouter
hook to manage navigation (push
, replace
, back
).
It's similar to Next.js useRouter
with added transition support.
"use client";
import { useTransitionRouter } from "next-transition-router";
export function Programmatic() {
const router = useTransitionRouter();
return (
<button
onClick={() => {
alert("Do something before navigating away");
router.push("/about");
}}
>
Go to /about
</button>
);
}
Important
Back and Forward browser navigation doesn't trigger page transitions, and this is intentional.
Use the useTransitionState
hook to determine the current stage of the transition.
Possible stage
values: 'entering' | 'leaving' | 'none'
.
Aditionally, you have the isReady
state (boolean
).
"use client";
import { useTransitionState } from "next-transition-router";
export function Example() {
const { stage, isReady } = useTransitionState();
return (
<div>
<p>Current stage: {stage}</p>
<p>Page ready: {isReady ? "Yes" : "No"}</p>
</div>
);
}
Tip
This is useful, for example, if you want to trigger a reveal animation after the page transition ends.
TransitionRouter
manages cleanup functions for leave
and enter
callbacks, to prevent memory leaks.
Similar to React's useEffect
hook, you can return a cleanup function to cancel the animation.
"use client";
import { gsap } from "gsap";
import { TransitionRouter } from "next-transition-router";
export function Providers({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
return (
<TransitionRouter
leave={(next) => {
const tween = gsap.fromTo("main", { autoAlpha: 1 }, { autoAlpha: 0, onComplete: next });
return () => tween.kill();
}}
enter={(next) => {
const tween = gsap.fromTo("main", { autoAlpha: 0 }, { autoAlpha: 1, onComplete: next });
return () => tween.kill();
}}
>
{children}
</TransitionRouter>
);
}
Prop | Type | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
leave |
function |
next => next() |
Function to handle the leaving animation |
enter |
function |
next => next() |
Function to handle the entering animation |
auto |
boolean |
false |
Flag to enable/disable auto-detection of links |
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
stage |
'entering' | 'leaving' | 'none' |
Indicates the current stage of the transition. |
isReady |
boolean |
Indicates if the new page is ready to be animated. |
This package may not cover every use case. If you require a specific scenario, please open an issue, and we can explore the possibility of extending the functionality.
MIT.