--- title: fetch description: API reference for the extended fetch function. --- Next.js extends the [Web `fetch()` API](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/API/Fetch_API) to allow each request on the server to set its own persistent caching and revalidation semantics. In the browser, the `cache` option indicates how a fetch request will interact with the _browser's_ HTTP cache. With this extension, `cache` indicates how a _server-side_ fetch request will interact with the framework's persistent [Data Cache](/docs/app/guides/caching#data-cache). You can call `fetch` with `async` and `await` directly within Server Components. ```tsx filename="app/page.tsx" switcher export default async function Page() { let data = await fetch('https://api.vercel.app/blog') let posts = await data.json() return ( ) } ``` ```jsx filename="app/page.js" switcher export default async function Page() { let data = await fetch('https://api.vercel.app/blog') let posts = await data.json() return ( ) } ``` ## `fetch(url, options)` Since Next.js extends the [Web `fetch()` API](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/API/Fetch_API), you can use any of the [native options available](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/API/fetch#parameters). ### `options.cache` Configure how the request should interact with Next.js [Data Cache](/docs/app/guides/caching#data-cache). ```ts fetch(`https://...`, { cache: 'force-cache' | 'no-store' }) ``` - **`auto no cache`** (default): Next.js fetches the resource from the remote server on every request in development, but will fetch once during `next build` because the route will be statically prerendered. If [Dynamic APIs](/docs/app/getting-started/partial-prerendering#dynamic-rendering) are detected on the route, Next.js will fetch the resource on every request. - **`no-store`**: Next.js fetches the resource from the remote server on every request, even if Dynamic APIs are not detected on the route. - **`force-cache`**: Next.js looks for a matching request in its Data Cache. - If there is a match and it is fresh, it will be returned from the cache. - If there is no match or a stale match, Next.js will fetch the resource from the remote server and update the cache with the downloaded resource. ### `options.next.revalidate` ```ts fetch(`https://...`, { next: { revalidate: false | 0 | number } }) ``` Set the cache lifetime of a resource (in seconds). [Data Cache](/docs/app/guides/caching#data-cache). - **`false`** - Cache the resource indefinitely. Semantically equivalent to `revalidate: Infinity`. The HTTP cache may evict older resources over time. - **`0`** - Prevent the resource from being cached. - **`number`** - (in seconds) Specify the resource should have a cache lifetime of at most `n` seconds. > **Good to know**: > > - If an individual `fetch()` request sets a `revalidate` number lower than the [default `revalidate`](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/route-segment-config#revalidate) of a route, the whole route revalidation interval will be decreased. > - If two fetch requests with the same URL in the same route have different `revalidate` values, the lower value will be used. > - Conflicting options such as `{ revalidate: 3600, cache: 'no-store' }` are not allowed, both will be ignored, and in development mode a warning will be printed to the terminal. ### `options.next.tags` ```ts fetch(`https://...`, { next: { tags: ['collection'] } }) ``` Set the cache tags of a resource. Data can then be revalidated on-demand using [`revalidateTag`](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/api-reference/functions/revalidateTag). The max length for a custom tag is 256 characters and the max tag items is 128. ## Troubleshooting ### Fetch default `auto no store` and `cache: 'no-store'` not showing fresh data in development Next.js caches `fetch` responses in Server Components across Hot Module Replacement (HMR) in local development for faster responses and to reduce costs for billed API calls. By default, the [HMR cache](/docs/app/api-reference/config/next-config-js/serverComponentsHmrCache) applies to all fetch requests, including those with the default `auto no cache` and `cache: 'no-store'` option. This means uncached requests will not show fresh data between HMR refreshes. However, the cache will be cleared on navigation or full-page reloads. See the [`serverComponentsHmrCache`](/docs/app/api-reference/config/next-config-js/serverComponentsHmrCache) docs for more information. ### Hard refresh and caching in development In development mode, if the request includes the `cache-control: no-cache` header, `options.cache`, `options.next.revalidate`, and `options.next.tags` are ignored, and the `fetch` request is served from the source. Browsers typically include `cache-control: no-cache` when the cache is disabled in developer tools or during a hard refresh. ## Version History | Version | Changes | | --------- | ------------------- | | `v13.0.0` | `fetch` introduced. |