--- title: after description: API Reference for the after function. --- `after` allows you to schedule work to be executed after a response (or prerender) is finished. This is useful for tasks and other side effects that should not block the response, such as logging and analytics. It can be used in [Server Components](/docs/app/getting-started/server-and-client-components) (including [`generateMetadata`](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/api-reference/functions/generate-metadata)), [Server Actions](/docs/app/getting-started/updating-data), [Route Handlers](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/route), and [Middleware](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/middleware). The function accepts a callback that will be executed after the response (or prerender) is finished: ```tsx filename="app/layout.tsx" switcher import { after } from 'next/server' // Custom logging function import { log } from '@/app/utils' export default function Layout({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) { after(() => { // Execute after the layout is rendered and sent to the user log() }) return <>{children} } ``` ```jsx filename="app/layout.jsx" switcher import { after } from 'next/server' // Custom logging function import { log } from '@/app/utils' export default function Layout({ children }) { after(() => { // Execute after the layout is rendered and sent to the user log() }) return <>{children} } ``` > **Good to know:** `after` is not a [Dynamic API](/docs/app/getting-started/partial-prerendering#dynamic-rendering) and calling it does not cause a route to become dynamic. If it's used within a static page, the callback will execute at build time, or whenever a page is revalidated. ## Reference ### Parameters - A callback function which will be executed after the response (or prerender) is finished. ### Duration `after` will run for the platform's default or configured max duration of your route. If your platform supports it, you can configure the timeout limit using the [`maxDuration`](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/route-segment-config#maxduration) route segment config. ## Good to know - `after` will be executed even if the response didn't complete successfully. Including when an error is thrown or when `notFound` or `redirect` is called. - You can use React `cache` to deduplicate functions called inside `after`. - `after` can be nested inside other `after` calls, for example, you can create utility functions that wrap `after` calls to add additional functionality. ## Examples ### With request APIs You can use request APIs such as [`cookies`](/docs/app/api-reference/functions/cookies) and [`headers`](/docs/app/api-reference/functions/headers) inside `after` in [Server Actions](/docs/app/getting-started/updating-data) and [Route Handlers](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/route). This is useful for logging activity after a mutation. For example: ```ts filename="app/api/route.ts" highlight={2,7-9} switcher import { after } from 'next/server' import { cookies, headers } from 'next/headers' import { logUserAction } from '@/app/utils' export async function POST(request: Request) { // Perform mutation // ... // Log user activity for analytics after(async () => { const userAgent = (await headers().get('user-agent')) || 'unknown' const sessionCookie = (await cookies().get('session-id'))?.value || 'anonymous' logUserAction({ sessionCookie, userAgent }) }) return new Response(JSON.stringify({ status: 'success' }), { status: 200, headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }, }) } ``` ```js filename="app/api/route.js" highlight={2,7-9} switcher import { after } from 'next/server' import { cookies, headers } from 'next/headers' import { logUserAction } from '@/app/utils' export async function POST(request) { // Perform mutation // ... // Log user activity for analytics after(async () => { const userAgent = (await headers().get('user-agent')) || 'unknown' const sessionCookie = (await cookies().get('session-id'))?.value || 'anonymous' logUserAction({ sessionCookie, userAgent }) }) return new Response(JSON.stringify({ status: 'success' }), { status: 200, headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }, }) } ``` However, you cannot use these request APIs inside `after` in [Server Components](/docs/app/getting-started/server-and-client-components). This is because Next.js needs to know which part of the tree access the request APIs to support [Partial Prerendering](/docs/app/getting-started/partial-prerendering), but `after` runs after React's rendering lifecycle. ## Platform Support | Deployment Option | Supported | | ------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------- | | [Node.js server](/docs/app/getting-started/deploying#nodejs-server) | Yes | | [Docker container](/docs/app/getting-started/deploying#docker) | Yes | | [Static export](/docs/app/getting-started/deploying#static-export) | No | | [Adapters](/docs/app/getting-started/deploying#adapters) | Platform-specific | Learn how to [configure `after`](/docs/app/guides/self-hosting#after) when self-hosting Next.js.
Reference: supporting `after` for serverless platforms Using `after` in a serverless context requires waiting for asynchronous tasks to finish after the response has been sent. In Next.js and Vercel, this is achieved using a primitive called `waitUntil(promise)`, which extends the lifetime of a serverless invocation until all promises passed to [`waitUntil`](https://vercel.com/docs/functions/functions-api-reference#waituntil) have settled. If you want your users to be able to run `after`, you will have to provide your implementation of `waitUntil` that behaves in an analogous way. When `after` is called, Next.js will access `waitUntil` like this: ```jsx const RequestContext = globalThis[Symbol.for('@next/request-context')] const contextValue = RequestContext?.get() const waitUntil = contextValue?.waitUntil ``` Which means that `globalThis[Symbol.for('@next/request-context')]` is expected to contain an object like this: ```tsx type NextRequestContext = { get(): NextRequestContextValue | undefined } type NextRequestContextValue = { waitUntil?: (promise: Promise) => void } ``` Here is an example of the implementation. ```tsx import { AsyncLocalStorage } from 'node:async_hooks' const RequestContextStorage = new AsyncLocalStorage() // Define and inject the accessor that next.js will use const RequestContext: NextRequestContext = { get() { return RequestContextStorage.getStore() }, } globalThis[Symbol.for('@next/request-context')] = RequestContext const handler = (req, res) => { const contextValue = { waitUntil: YOUR_WAITUNTIL } // Provide the value return RequestContextStorage.run(contextValue, () => nextJsHandler(req, res)) } ```
## Version History | Version History | Description | | --------------- | ---------------------------- | | `v15.1.0` | `after` became stable. | | `v15.0.0-rc` | `unstable_after` introduced. |