Optimize Next.js app performance by lazy loading and hydrating components when they enter the viewport.
- ⚡️ Lower Total Blocking Time (TBT)
- 📦 Smaller Bundle Size
- 🚀 Improved Performance
npm install next-lazy-hydration-on-scroll
# or
yarn add next-lazy-hydration-on-scroll
# or
pnpm add next-lazy-hydration-on-scroll
import { lazyHydrate } from 'next-lazy-hydration-on-scroll'
const LazyComponent = lazyHydrate(() => import('./components/HeavyComponent'), {
LoadingComponent: () => <div>Loading...</div>, // Optional
})
export default function Page() {
return (
<div>
<header>Always hydrated</header>
<LazyComponent /> {/* Hydrates when scrolled into view */}
</div>
)
}
- Server renders full HTML content
- Components remain static until scrolled into view
- When component enters viewport:
- JavaScript is loaded
- Component is hydrated
- Interactivity is enabled
- Keep components in separate files
- Avoid barrel files (index.ts that re-exports components)
- Import components directly:
// ✅ Correct
import { ComponentA } from './components/ComponentA'
// ❌ Avoid
// components/index.ts with re-exports
Works in all modern browsers supporting IntersectionObserver (IE11+ with polyfill).
- SEO friendly - content is pre-rendered
- Components are wrapped in
<section>
elements for stable viewport detection - Works with Next.js 12 and above
A: No - all content is pre-rendered and visible to search engines.
A: All modern browsers (IE11+ with polyfill).
A: For two reasons: to provide a stable element for IntersectionObserver tracking, and to handle hydration mismatches with suppressHydrationWarning
.
A: It prevents React from hydrating down the component tree, allowing to preserve server-rendered content while controlling when hydration occurs.