API routes provide a solution to build your API with Next.js.
Any file inside the folder pages/api is mapped to /api/* and will be treated as an API endpoint instead of a page. They are server-side only bundles and won't increase your client-side bundle size.
For example, the following API route pages/api/user.js returns a json response with a status code of 200:
export default function handler(req, res) { res.status(200).json({ name: 'John Doe' }) }
Note: API Routes will be affected by
pageExtensionsconfiguration innext.config.js.
For an API route to work, you need to export a function as default (a.k.a request handler), which then receives the following parameters:
req: An instance of http.IncomingMessage, plus some pre-built middlewaresres: An instance of http.ServerResponse, plus some helper functionsTo handle different HTTP methods in an API route, you can use req.method in your request handler, like so:
export default function handler(req, res) { if (req.method === 'POST') { // Process a POST request } else { // Handle any other HTTP method } }
To fetch API endpoints, take a look into any of the examples at the start of this section.
For new projects, you can build your entire API with API Routes. If you have an existing API, you do not need to forward calls to the API through an API Route. Some other use cases for API Routes are:
/api/secret instead of https://company.com/secret-url)next exportFor more information on what to do next, we recommend the following sections: