Image Component and Image Optimization

Examples

The Next.js Image component, next/image, is an extension of the HTML <img> element, evolved for the modern web. It includes a variety of built-in performance optimizations to help you achieve good Core Web Vitals. These scores are an important measurement of user experience on your website, and are factored into Google’s search rankings.

Some of the optimizations built into the Image component include:

  • Improved Performance: Always serve correctly sized image for each device, using modern image formats
  • Visual Stability: Prevent Cumulative Layout Shift automatically
  • Faster Page Loads: Images are only loaded when they enter the viewport, with optional blur-up placeholders
  • Asset Flexibility: On-demand image resizing, even for images stored on remote servers

Using the Image Component

To add an image to your application, import the next/image component:

  1. import Image from 'next/image'

Alternatively, you can import next/future/image if you need a component much closer to the native <img> element:

  1. import Image from 'next/future/image'

Now, you can define the src for your image (either local or remote).

Local Images

To use a local image, import your .jpg, .png, or .webp files:

  1. import profilePic from '../public/me.png'

Dynamic await import() or require() are not supported. The import must be static so it can be analyzed at build time.

Next.js will automatically determine the width and height of your image based on the imported file. These values are used to prevent Cumulative Layout Shift while your image is loading.

  1. import Image from 'next/image'
  2. import profilePic from '../public/me.png'
  3. function Home() {
  4. return (
  5. <>
  6. <h1>My Homepage</h1>
  7. <Image
  8. src={profilePic}
  9. alt="Picture of the author"
  10. // width={500} automatically provided
  11. // height={500} automatically provided
  12. // blurDataURL="data:..." automatically provided
  13. // placeholder="blur" // Optional blur-up while loading
  14. />
  15. <p>Welcome to my homepage!</p>
  16. </>
  17. )
  18. }

Remote Images

To use a remote image, the src property should be a URL string, which can be relative or absolute. Because Next.js does not have access to remote files during the build process, you’ll need to provide the width, height and optional blurDataURL props manually:

  1. import Image from 'next/image'
  2. export default function Home() {
  3. return (
  4. <>
  5. <h1>My Homepage</h1>
  6. <Image
  7. src="/me.png"
  8. alt="Picture of the author"
  9. width={500}
  10. height={500}
  11. />
  12. <p>Welcome to my homepage!</p>
  13. </>
  14. )
  15. }

Learn more about the sizing requirements in next/image.

Domains

Sometimes you may want to optimize a remote image, but still use the built-in Next.js Image Optimization API. To do this, leave the loader at its default setting and enter an absolute URL for the Image src prop.

To protect your application from malicious users, you must define a list of remote hostnames you intend to use with the next/image component.

Learn more about remotePatterns configuration.

Loaders

Note that in the example earlier, a partial URL ("/me.png") is provided for a remote image. This is possible because of the next/image loader architecture.

A loader is a function that generates the URLs for your image. It modifies the provided src, and generates multiple URLs to request the image at different sizes. These multiple URLs are used in the automatic srcset generation, so that visitors to your site will be served an image that is the right size for their viewport.

The default loader for Next.js applications uses the built-in Image Optimization API, which optimizes images from anywhere on the web, and then serves them directly from the Next.js web server. If you would like to serve your images directly from a CDN or image server, you can use one of the built-in loaders or write your own with a few lines of JavaScript.

Loaders can be defined per-image, or at the application level.

Priority

You should add the priority property to the image that will be the Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) element for each page. Doing so allows Next.js to specially prioritize the image for loading (e.g. through preload tags or priority hints), leading to a meaningful boost in LCP.

The LCP element is typically the largest image or text block visible within the viewport of the page. When you run next dev, you’ll see a console warning if the LCP element is an <Image> without the priority property.

Once you’ve identified the LCP image, you can add the property like this:

  1. import Image from 'next/image'
  2. export default function Home() {
  3. return (
  4. <>
  5. <h1>My Homepage</h1>
  6. <Image
  7. src="/me.png"
  8. alt="Picture of the author"
  9. width={500}
  10. height={500}
  11. priority
  12. />
  13. <p>Welcome to my homepage!</p>
  14. </>
  15. )
  16. }

See more about priority in the next/image component documentation.

Image Sizing

One of the ways that images most commonly hurt performance is through layout shift, where the image pushes other elements around on the page as it loads in. This performance problem is so annoying to users that it has its own Core Web Vital, called Cumulative Layout Shift. The way to avoid image-based layout shifts is to always size your images. This allows the browser to reserve precisely enough space for the image before it loads.

Because next/image is designed to guarantee good performance results, it cannot be used in a way that will contribute to layout shift, and must be sized in one of three ways:

  1. Automatically, using a static import
  2. Explicitly, by including a width and height property
  3. Implicitly, by using layout=”fill” which causes the image to expand to fill its parent element.

What if I don’t know the size of my images?

If you are accessing images from a source without knowledge of the images’ sizes, there are several things you can do:

Use layout='fill'

The fill layout mode allows your image to be sized by its parent element. Consider using CSS to give the image’s parent element space on the page, then using the objectFit property with fill, contain, or cover, along with the objectPosition property to define how the image should occupy that space.

Normalize your images

If you’re serving images from a source that you control, consider modifying your image pipeline to normalize the images to a specific size.

Modify your API calls

If your application is retrieving image URLs using an API call (such as to a CMS), you may be able to modify the API call to return the image dimensions along with the URL.

If none of the suggested methods works for sizing your images, the next/image component is designed to work well on a page alongside standard <img> elements.

Styling

Note: Many of the styling issues listed below can be solved with next/future/image

Styling the Image component is not that different from styling a normal <img> element, but there are a few guidelines to keep in mind:

Pick the correct layout mode

The image component has several different layout modes that define how it is sized on the page. If the styling of your image isn’t turning out the way you want, consider experimenting with other layout modes.

Target the image with className, not based on DOM structure

For most layout modes, the Image component will have a DOM structure of one <img> tag wrapped by exactly one <span>. For some modes, it may also have a sibling <span> for spacing. These additional <span> elements are critical to allow the component to prevent layout shifts.

The recommended way to style the inner <img> is to set the className prop on the Image component to the value of an imported CSS Module. The value of className will be automatically applied to the underlying <img> element.

Alternatively, you can import a global stylesheet and manually set the className prop to the same name used in the global stylesheet.

You cannot use styled-jsx because it’s scoped to the current component.

When using layout='fill', the parent element must have position: relative

This is necessary for the proper rendering of the image element in that layout mode.

When using layout='responsive', the parent element must have display: block

This is the default for <div> elements but should be specified otherwise.

Properties

View all properties available to the next/image component.

Styling Examples

For examples of the Image component used with the various fill modes, see the Image component example app.

Configuration

The next/image component and Next.js Image Optimization API can be configured in the next.config.js file. These configurations allow you to enable remote images, define custom image breakpoints, change caching behavior and more.

Read the full image configuration documentation for more information.

For more information on what to do next, we recommend the following sections:

next/imageSee all available properties for the Image component