Built-in React Hooks

Hooks let you use different React features from your components. You can either use the built-in Hooks or combine them to build your own. This page lists all the built-in Hooks in React.


State Hooks

State lets a component “remember” information like user input. For example, a form component can use state to store the input value, while an image gallery component can use state to store the selected image index.

To add state to a component, use one of these Hooks:

function ImageGallery() {
const [index, setIndex] = useState(0);
// ...

Context Hooks

Context lets a component receive information from distant parents without passing it as props. For example, your app’s top-level component can pass the current UI theme to all components below, no matter how deep.

function Button() {
const theme = useContext(ThemeContext);
// ...

Ref Hooks

Refs let a component hold some information that isn’t used for rendering, like a DOM node or a timeout ID. Unlike with state, updating a ref does not re-render your component. Refs are an “escape hatch” from the React paradigm. They are useful when you need to work with non-React systems, such as the built-in browser APIs.

  • useRef declares a ref. You can hold any value in it, but most often it’s used to hold a DOM node.
  • useImperativeHandle lets you customize the ref exposed by your component. This is rarely used.
function Form() {
const inputRef = useRef(null);
// ...

Effect Hooks

Effects let a component connect to and synchronize with external systems. This includes dealing with network, browser DOM, animations, widgets written using a different UI library, and in general any non-React code.

  • useEffect connects a component to an external system.
function ChatRoom({ roomId }) {
useEffect(() => {
const connection = createConnection(roomId);
connection.connect();
return () => connection.disconnect();
}, [roomId]);
// ...

Effects are an “escape hatch” from the React paradigm. Don’t use Effects to orchestrate the data flow of your application. If you’re not interacting with an external system, you might not need an Effect.

There are two rarely used variations of useEffect with differences in timing:

  • useLayoutEffect fires before the browser repaints the screen. You can measure layout here.
  • useInsertionEffect fires before React makes changes to the DOM. Libraries can insert dynamic CSS here.

Performance Hooks

A common way to optimize re-rendering performance is to skip unnecessary work. For example, you can tell React to reuse a cached calculation or to skip a re-render if the data has not changed since the previous render.

To skip calculations and unnecessary re-rendering, use one of these Hooks:

  • useMemo lets you cache the result of an expensive calculation.
  • useCallback lets you cache a function definition before passing it down to an optimized component.
function TodoList({ todos, tab, theme }) {
const visibleTodos = useMemo(() => filterTodos(todos, tab), [todos, tab]);
// ...
}

Sometimes, you can’t skip re-rendering because the screen actually needs to update. In that case, you can improve performance by separating blocking updates that must be synchronous (like typing into an input) from non-blocking updates which don’t need to block the user interface (like updating a chart).

To prioritize rendering, use one of these Hooks:

  • useTransition lets you mark a state transition as non-blocking and allow other updates to interrupt it.
  • useDeferredValue lets you defer updating a non-critical part of the UI and let other parts update first.

Other Hooks

These Hooks are mostly useful to library authors and aren’t commonly used in the application code.

  • useDebugValue lets you customize the label React DevTools displays for your custom Hook.
  • useId lets a component associate a unique ID with itself. Typically used with accessibility APIs.
  • useSyncExternalStore lets a component subscribe to an external store.

Your own Hooks

You can also define your own custom Hooks as JavaScript functions.