--- title: usePathname description: API Reference for the usePathname hook. --- `usePathname` is a **Client Component** hook that lets you read the current URL's **pathname**. ```tsx filename="app/example-client-component.tsx" switcher 'use client' import { usePathname } from 'next/navigation' export default function ExampleClientComponent() { const pathname = usePathname() return

Current pathname: {pathname}

} ``` ```jsx filename="app/example-client-component.js" switcher 'use client' import { usePathname } from 'next/navigation' export default function ExampleClientComponent() { const pathname = usePathname() return

Current pathname: {pathname}

} ``` `usePathname` intentionally requires using a [Client Component](/docs/app/getting-started/server-and-client-components). It's important to note Client Components are not a de-optimization. They are an integral part of the [Server Components](/docs/app/getting-started/server-and-client-components) architecture. For example, a Client Component with `usePathname` will be rendered into HTML on the initial page load. When navigating to a new route, this component does not need to be re-fetched. Instead, the component is downloaded once (in the client JavaScript bundle), and re-renders based on the current state. > **Good to know**: > > - Reading the current URL from a [Server Component](/docs/app/getting-started/server-and-client-components) is not supported. This design is intentional to support layout state being preserved across page navigations. > - Compatibility mode: > - `usePathname` can return `null` when a [fallback route](/docs/pages/api-reference/functions/get-static-paths#fallback-true) is being rendered or when a `pages` directory page has been [automatically statically optimized](/docs/pages/building-your-application/rendering/automatic-static-optimization) by Next.js and the router is not ready. > - When using `usePathname` with rewrites in [`next.config`](/docs/app/api-reference/config/next-config-js/rewrites) or [`Middleware`](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/middleware), `useState` and `useEffect` must also be used in order to avoid hydration mismatch errors. > - Next.js will automatically update your types if it detects both an `app` and `pages` directory in your project. ## Parameters ```tsx const pathname = usePathname() ``` `usePathname` does not take any parameters. ## Returns `usePathname` returns a string of the current URL's pathname. For example: | URL | Returned value | | ------------------- | --------------------- | | `/` | `'/'` | | `/dashboard` | `'/dashboard'` | | `/dashboard?v=2` | `'/dashboard'` | | `/blog/hello-world` | `'/blog/hello-world'` | ## Examples ### Do something in response to a route change ```tsx filename="app/example-client-component.tsx" switcher 'use client' import { usePathname, useSearchParams } from 'next/navigation' function ExampleClientComponent() { const pathname = usePathname() const searchParams = useSearchParams() useEffect(() => { // Do something here... }, [pathname, searchParams]) } ``` ```jsx filename="app/example-client-component.js" switcher 'use client' import { usePathname, useSearchParams } from 'next/navigation' function ExampleClientComponent() { const pathname = usePathname() const searchParams = useSearchParams() useEffect(() => { // Do something here... }, [pathname, searchParams]) } ``` | Version | Changes | | --------- | ------------------------- | | `v13.0.0` | `usePathname` introduced. |