Creation:2024-12-07Last update:2026-05-31

    Translate your Next.js and Page Router website using Intlayer | Internationalization (i18n)

    ide.intlayer.org

    Table of Contents

    Why Intlayer over alternatives?

    Compared to main solutions like next-intl or i18next, Intlayer is a solution that comes with integrated optimizations such as:

    Intlayer is optimized to work with Server Components for efficient rendering and is fully compatible with Turbopack. It does not block static rendering and offers middleware as well as all the features needed for scaling internationalization (i18n).

    Intlayer is compatible with Next.js 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16. If you are using the Next.js Pages Router, you can refer to this guide. Locale routing is useful for SEO, bundle size, and performance. If you don't need it, you can refer to this guide. For Next.js 12, 13, 14, and 15 with the App Router, refer to this guide.

    Instead of loading massive JSON files into your pages, load only the necessary content. Intlayer helps reduce your bundle and page sizes by up to 50%.

    Scoping your application's content facilitates maintenance for large-scale applications. You can duplicate or delete a single feature folder without the mental burden of reviewing your entire content codebase. Additionally, Intlayer is fully typed to ensure your content's accuracy.

    Co-locating content reduces the context needed by Large Language Models (LLMs). Intlayer also comes with a suite of tools, such as a CLI to test for missing translations,LSP, MCP, and agent skills, to make the developer experience (DX) even smoother for AI agents.

    Use automation to translate in your CI/CD pipeline using the LLM of your choice at the cost of your AI provider. Intlayer also offers a compiler to automate content extraction, as well as a web platform to help translate in the background.

    Connecting massive JSON files to components can lead to performance and reactivity issues. Intlayer optimizes your content loading at build time.

    More than just an i18n solution, Intlayer provides an self-hosted visual editor and a full CMS to help you manage your multilingual content in real-time, making collaboration with translators, copywriters, and other team members seamless. Content can be stored locally and/or remotely.


    Step-by-Step Guide to Set Up Intlayer in a Next.js Application Using Page Router

    1. Install Dependencies

      Install the necessary packages using your preferred package manager:

      bash
      npm install intlayer next-intlayernpx intlayer init
      • intlayer

        The core package that provides internationalization tools for configuration management, translation, content declaration, transpilation, and CLI commands.

      • next-intlayer

        The package that integrates Intlayer with Next.js. It provides context providers and hooks for Next.js internationalization. Additionally, it includes the Next.js plugin for integrating Intlayer with Webpack or Turbopack, as well as middleware for detecting the user's preferred locale, managing cookies, and handling URL redirection.

    2. Configure Your Project

      Create a configuration file to define the languages supported by your application:

      intlayer.config.ts
      import { Locales, type IntlayerConfig } from "intlayer";
      
      const config: IntlayerConfig = {
        internationalization: {
          locales: [
            Locales.ENGLISH,
            Locales.FRENCH,
            Locales.SPANISH,
            // Add your other locales here
          ],
          defaultLocale: Locales.ENGLISH,
        },
      };
      
      export default config;
      Through this configuration file, you can set up localized URLs, middleware redirection, cookie names, the location and extension of your content declarations, disable Intlayer logs in the console, and more. For a complete list of available parameters, refer to the configuration documentation.
    3. Integrate Intlayer with Next.js Configuration

      Modify your Next.js configuration to incorporate Intlayer:

      next.config.mjs
      import { withIntlayer } from "next-intlayer/server";/** @type {import('next').NextConfig} */const nextConfig = {  // Your existing Next.js configuration};export default withIntlayer(nextConfig);
      The withIntlayer() Next.js plugin is used to integrate Intlayer with Next.js. It ensures the building of content declaration files and monitors them in development mode. It defines Intlayer environment variables within the Webpack or Turbopack environments. Additionally, it provides aliases to optimize performance and ensures compatibility with server components.

      The withIntlayer() function is a promise function. If you want to use it with other plugins, you can await it. Example:

      tsx
      const nextConfig = await withIntlayer(nextConfig);const nextConfigWithOtherPlugins = withOtherPlugins(nextConfig);export default nextConfigWithOtherPlugins;
    4. Configure Middleware for Locale Detection

      Set up middleware to automatically detect and handle the user's preferred locale:

      src/middleware.ts
      export { intlayerProxy as middleware } from "next-intlayer/middleware";
      
      export const config = {
        matcher:
          "/((?!api|static|assets|robots|sitemap|sw|service-worker|manifest|.*\\..*|_next).*)",
      };
      Adapt the matcher parameter to match the routes of your application. For more details, refer to the Next.js documentation on configuring the matcher.
    5. Define Dynamic Locale Routes

      Implement dynamic routing to serve localized content based on the user's locale.

      1. Create Locale-Specific Pages:

        Rename your main page file to include the [locale] dynamic segment.

        bash
        mv src/pages/index.tsx src/pages/[locale]/index.tsx
      2. Update _app.tsx to Handle Localization:

        Modify your _app.tsx to include Intlayer providers.

        src/pages/_app.tsx
        import type { FC } from "react";import type { AppProps } from "next/app";import { IntlayerClientProvider } from "next-intlayer";const App = FC<AppProps>({ Component, pageProps }) => {  const { locale } = pageProps;  return (    <IntlayerClientProvider locale={locale}>      <Component {...pageProps} />    </IntlayerClientProvider>  );}export default MyApp;
      3. Set Up getStaticPaths and getStaticProps:

        In your [locale]/index.tsx, define the paths and props to handle different locales.

        src/pages/[locale]/index.tsx
        import type { FC } from "react";import type { GetStaticPaths, GetStaticProps } from "next";import { type Locales, getConfiguration } from "intlayer";const HomePage: FC = () => <div>{/* Your content here */}</div>;export const getStaticPaths: GetStaticPaths = () => {  const { internationalization } = getConfiguration();  const { locales } = internationalization;  const paths = locales.map((locale) => ({    params: { locale },  }));  return { paths, fallback: false };};export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps = ({ params }) => {  const locale = params?.locale as string;  return {    props: {      locale,    },  };};export default HomePage;
      getStaticPaths and getStaticProps ensure that your application pre-builds the necessary pages for all locales in Next.js Page Router. This approach reduces runtime computation and leads to an improved user experience. For more details, refer to the Next.js documentation on getStaticPaths and getStaticProps.
    6. Declare Your Content

      Create and manage your content declarations to store translations.

      src/pages/[locale]/home.content.ts
      import { t, type Dictionary } from "intlayer";
      
      const homeContent = {
        key: "home",
        content: {
          title: t({
            en: "Welcome to My Website",
            fr: "Bienvenue sur mon site Web",
            es: "Bienvenido a mi sitio web",
          }),
          description: t({
            en: "Get started by editing this page.",
            fr: "Commencez par éditer cette page.",
            es: "Comience por editar esta página.",
          }),
        },
      } satisfies Dictionary;
      
      export default homeContent;

      For more information on declaring content, refer to the content declaration guide.

    7. Utilize Content in Your Code

      Access your content dictionaries throughout your application to display translated content.

      src/pages/[locale]/index.tsx
      import type { FC } from "react";
      import { useIntlayer } from "next-intlayer";
      import { ComponentExample } from "@components/ComponentExample";
      
      const HomePage: FC = () => {
        const content = useIntlayer("home");
      
        return (
          <div>
            <h1>{content.title}</h1>
            <p>{content.description}</p>
            <ComponentExample />
            {/* Additional components */}
          </div>
        );
      };
      
      // ... Rest of the code, including getStaticPaths and getStaticProps
      
      export default HomePage;
      src/components/ComponentExample.tsx
      import type { FC } from "react";
      import { useIntlayer } from "next-intlayer";
      
      export const ComponentExample: FC = () => {
        const content = useIntlayer("component-example"); // Ensure you have a corresponding content declaration
      
        return (
          <div>
            <h2>{content.title}</h2>
            <p>{content.content}</p>
          </div>
        );
      };
      When using translations in string attributes (e.g., alt, title, href, aria-label), call the
      value of the function as follows:
      html
      <img src="{content.image.src.value}" alt="{content.image.value}" /><img src="{content.image.src.toString()}" alt="{content.image.toString()}" /><img src="{String(content.image.src)}" alt="{String(content.image)}" />
      To Learn more about the useIntlayer hook, refer to the documentation.
    8. Internationalization of your metadata

      Optional

      In the case you want to internationalize your metadata, such as the title of your page, you can use the getStaticProps function provided by Next.js Page Router. Inside, you can retrieve the content from the getIntlayer function to translate your metadata.

      src/pages/[locale]/metadata.content.ts
      import { type Dictionary, t } from "intlayer";
      import { type Metadata } from "next";
      
      const metadataContent = {
        key: "page-metadata",
        content: {
          title: t({
            en: "Create Next App",
            fr: "Créer une application Next.js",
            es: "Crear una aplicación Next.js",
          }),
          description: t({
            en: "Generated by create next app",
            fr: "Généré par create next app",
            es: "Generado por create next app",
          }),
        },
      } satisfies Dictionary<Metadata>;
      
      export default metadataContent;
      src/pages/[locale]/index.tsx
      import { GetStaticPaths, GetStaticProps } from "next";
      import { getIntlayer, getMultilingualUrls } from "intlayer";
      import { useIntlayer } from "next-intlayer";
      import Head from "next/head";
      import type { FC } from "react";
      
      interface HomePageProps {
        locale: string;
        metadata: {
          title: string;
          description: string;
        };
        multilingualUrls: Record<string, string>;
      }
      
      const HomePage: FC<HomePageProps> = ({
        metadata,
        multilingualUrls,
        locale,
      }) => {
        const content = useIntlayer("page");
      
        return (
          <div>
            <Head>
              <title>{metadata.title}</title>
              <meta name="description" content={metadata.description} />
              {/* Generate hreflang tags for SEO */}
              {Object.entries(multilingualUrls).map(([lang, url]) => (
                <link key={lang} rel="alternate" hrefLang={lang} href={url} />
              ))}
              <link rel="canonical" href={multilingualUrls[locale]} />
            </Head>
      
            {/* Page content */}
            <main>{/* Your page content here */}</main>
          </div>
        );
      };
      
      export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps<HomePageProps> = async ({
        params,
      }) => {
        const locale = params?.locale as string;
      
        const metadata = getIntlayer("page-metadata", locale);
      
        /**
         * Generates an object containing all url for each locale.
         *
         * Example:
         * ```ts
         *  getMultilingualUrls('/about');
         *
         *  // Returns
         *  // {
         *  //   en: '/about',
         *  //   fr: '/fr/about',
         *  //   es: '/es/about',
         *  // }
         * ```
         */
        const multilingualUrls = getMultilingualUrls("/");
      
        return {
          props: {
            locale,
            metadata,
            multilingualUrls,
          },
        };
      };
      
      export default HomePage;
      
      // ... Rest of the code including getStaticPaths
      Note that the getIntlayer function imported from next-intlayer returns your content wrapped in an IntlayerNode, allowing integration with the visual editor. In contrast, the getIntlayer function imported from intlayer returns your content directly without additional properties.

      Alternatively, you can use the getTranslation function to declare your metadata. However, using content declaration files is recommended to automate the translation of your metadata and externalize the content at some point.

      src/pages/[locale]/index.tsx
      import { GetStaticPaths, GetStaticProps } from "next";
      import {
        type IConfigLocales,
        getTranslation,
        getMultilingualUrls,
      } from "intlayer";
      import { useIntlayer } from "next-intlayer";
      import Head from "next/head";
      import type { FC } from "react";
      
      interface HomePageProps {
        locale: string;
        metadata: {
          title: string;
          description: string;
        };
        multilingualUrls: Record<string, string>;
      }
      
      const HomePage: FC<HomePageProps> = ({ metadata, multilingualUrls, locale }) => {
        const content = useIntlayer("page");
      
        return (
          <div>
            <Head>
              <title>{metadata.title}</title>
              <meta name="description" content={metadata.description} />
              {/* Generate hreflang tags for SEO */}
              {Object.entries(multilingualUrls).map(([lang, url]) => (
                <link
                  key={lang}
                  rel="alternate"
                  hrefLang={lang}
                  href={url}
                />
              ))}
              <link rel="canonical" href={multilingualUrls[locale]} />
            </Head>
      
            {/* Page content */}
            <main>
              {/* Your page content here */}
            </main>
          </div>
        );
      };
      
      export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps<HomePageProps> = async ({
        params
      }) => {
        const locale = params?.locale as string;
        const t = <T>(content: IConfigLocales<T>) => getTranslation(content, locale);
      
        const metadata = {
          title: t<string>({
            en: "My title",
            fr: "Mon titre",
            es: "Mi título",
          }),
          description: t({
            en: "My description",
            fr: "Ma description",
            es: "Mi descripción",
          }),
        };
      
        const multilingualUrls = getMultilingualUrls("/");
      
        return {
          props: {
            locale,
            metadata,
            multilingualUrls,
          },
        };
      };
      
      export default HomePage;
      
      // ... Rest of the code including getStaticPaths
      Learn more about the metadata optimization on the official Next.js documentation.
    9. Change the language of your content

      Optional

      To change the language of your content in Next.js, the recommended way is to use the Link component to redirect users to the appropriate localized page. The Link component enables prefetching of the page, which helps avoid a full page reload.

      src/components/LanguageSwitcher.tsx
      import {
        Locales,
        getHTMLTextDir,
        getLocaleName,
        getLocalizedUrl,
      } from "intlayer";
      import { useLocalePageRouter } from "next-intlayer";
      import { type FC } from "react";
      import Link from "next/link";
      
      const LocaleSwitcher: FC = () => {
        const { locale, pathWithoutLocale, availableLocales } = useLocalePageRouter();
      
        return (
          <div>
            <button popoverTarget="localePopover">{getLocaleName(locale)}</button>
            <div id="localePopover" popover="auto">
              {availableLocales.map((localeItem) => (
                <Link
                  href={getLocalizedUrl(pathWithoutLocale, localeItem)}
                  hrefLang={localeItem}
                  key={localeItem}
                  aria-current={locale === localeItem ? "page" : undefined}
                  onClick={() => setLocale(localeItem)}
                >
                  <span>
                    {/* Locale - e.g. FR */}
                    {localeItem}
                  </span>
                  <span>
                    {/* Language in its own Locale - e.g. Français */}
                    {getLocaleName(localeItem, locale)}
                  </span>
                  <span dir={getHTMLTextDir(localeItem)} lang={localeItem}>
                    {/* Language in current Locale - e.g. Francés with current locale set to Locales.SPANISH */}
                    {getLocaleName(localeItem)}
                  </span>
                  <span dir="ltr" lang={Locales.ENGLISH}>
                    {/* Language in English - e.g. French */}
                    {getLocaleName(localeItem, Locales.ENGLISH)}
                  </span>
                </Link>
              ))}
            </div>
          </div>
        );
      };
      An alternative way is to use the setLocale function provided by the useLocale hook. This function will not allow prefetching the page and will reload the page.
      In this case, without redirection using router.push, only your server-side code will change the locale of the content.
      src/components/LocaleSwitcher.tsx
      "use client";import { useRouter } from "next/navigation";import { useLocale } from "next-intlayer";import { getLocalizedUrl } from "intlayer";// ... Rest of the codeconst router = useRouter();const { setLocale } = useLocale({  onLocaleChange: (locale) => {    router.push(getLocalizedUrl(pathWithoutLocale, locale));  },});return (  <button onClick={() => setLocale(Locales.FRENCH)}>Change to French</button>);
      The useLocalePageRouter API is the same as useLocale. To Learn more about the useLocale hook, refer to the documentation.

      Documentation references:

    10. Optional

      To ensure that your application’s navigation respects the current locale, you can create a custom Link component. This component automatically prefixes internal URLs with the current language, so that. For example, when a French-speaking user clicks on a link to the "About" page, they are redirected to /fr/about instead of /about.

      This behavior is useful for several reasons:

      • SEO and User Experience: Localized URLs help search engines index language-specific pages correctly and provide users with content in their preferred language.
      • Consistency: By using a localized link throughout your application, you guarantee that navigation stays within the current locale, preventing unexpected language switches.
      • Maintainability: Centralizing the localization logic in a single component simplifies the management of URLs, making your codebase easier to maintain and extend as your application grows.

      Below is the implementation of a localized Link component in TypeScript:

      src/components/Link.tsx
      "use client";
      
      import { getLocalizedUrl } from "intlayer";
      import NextLink, { type LinkProps as NextLinkProps } from "next/link";
      import { useLocale } from "next-intlayer";
      import { forwardRef, PropsWithChildren, type ForwardedRef } from "react";
      
      /**
       * Utility function to check whether a given URL is external.
       * If the URL starts with http:// or https://, it's considered external.
       */
      export const checkIsExternalLink = (href?: string): boolean =>
        /^https?:\/\//.test(href ?? "");
      
      /**
       * A custom Link component that adapts the href attribute based on the current locale.
       * For internal links, it uses `getLocalizedUrl` to prefix the URL with the locale (e.g., /fr/about).
       * This ensures that navigation stays within the same locale context.
       */
      export const Link = forwardRef<
        HTMLAnchorElement,
        PropsWithChildren<NextLinkProps>
      >(({ href, children, ...props }, ref: ForwardedRef<HTMLAnchorElement>) => {
        const { locale } = useLocale();
        const isExternalLink = checkIsExternalLink(href.toString());
      
        // If the link is internal and a valid href is provided, get the localized URL.
        const hrefI18n: NextLinkProps["href"] =
          href && !isExternalLink ? getLocalizedUrl(href.toString(), locale) : href;
      
        return (
          <NextLink href={hrefI18n} ref={ref} {...props}>
            {children}
          </NextLink>
        );
      });
      
      Link.displayName = "Link";

      How It Works

      • Detecting External Links:
        The helper function checkIsExternalLink determines whether a URL is external. External links are left unchanged because they do not need localization.

      • Retrieving the Current Locale:
        The useLocale hook provides the current locale (e.g., fr for French).

      • Localizing the URL:
        For internal links (i.e., non-external), getLocalizedUrl is used to automatically prefix the URL with the current locale. This means that if your user is in French, passing /about as the href will transform it to /fr/about.

      • Returning the Link:
        The component returns an <a> element with the localized URL, ensuring that navigation is consistent with the locale.

      By integrating this Link component across your application, you maintain a coherent and language-aware user experience while also benefitting from improved SEO and usability.

    11. Optimize your bundle size

      Optional

      When using next-intlayer, dictionaries are included in the bundle for every page by default. To optimize bundle size, Intlayer provides an optional SWC plugin that intelligently replace useIntlayer calls using macros. This ensures dictionaries are only included in bundles for pages that actually use them.

      To enable this optimization, install the @intlayer/swc package. Once installed, next-intlayer will automatically detect and use the plugin:

      bash
      npm install @intlayer/swc --save-dev
      Note: This optimization is only available for Next.js 13 and above.

      Note: This package is not installed by default because SWC plugins are still experimental on Next.js. It may change in the future.

    Configure TypeScript

    Intlayer use module augmentation to get benefits of TypeScript and make your codebase stronger.

    Autocompletion

    Translation error

    Ensure your TypeScript configuration includes the autogenerated types.

    tsconfig.json
    {  // ... Your existing TypeScript configurations  "include": [    // ... Your existing TypeScript configurations    ".intlayer/**/*.ts", // Include the auto-generated types  ],}

    Git Configuration

    To keep your repository clean and avoid committing generated files, it's recommended to ignore files created by Intlayer.

    Add the following lines to your .gitignore file:

    .gitignore
    # Ignore the files generated by Intlayer.intlayer

    VS Code Extension

    To improve your development experience with Intlayer, you can install the official Intlayer VS Code Extension.

    Install from the VS Code Marketplace

    This extension provides:

    • Autocompletion for translation keys.
    • Real-time error detection for missing translations.
    • Inline previews of translated content.
    • Quick actions to easily create and update translations.

    For more details on how to use the extension, refer to the Intlayer VS Code Extension documentation.

    Additional Resources

    By following this guide, you can effectively integrate Intlayer into your Next.js application using the Page Router, enabling robust and scalable internationalization support for your web projects.

    Go Further

    To go further, you can implement the visual editor or externalize your content using the CMS.