--- title: "Built-in React Hooks" --- *Hooks* let you use different React features from your components. You can either use the built-in Hooks or combine them to build your own. This page lists all built-in Hooks in React. --- ## State Hooks {/*state-hooks*/} *State* lets a component ["remember" information like user input.](/learn/state-a-components-memory) For example, a form component can use state to store the input value, while an image gallery component can use state to store the selected image index. To add state to a component, use one of these Hooks: * [`useState`](/reference/react/useState) declares a state variable that you can update directly. * [`useReducer`](/reference/react/useReducer) declares a state variable with the update logic inside a [reducer function.](/learn/extracting-state-logic-into-a-reducer) ```js function ImageGallery() { const [index, setIndex] = useState(0); // ... ``` --- ## Context Hooks {/*context-hooks*/} *Context* lets a component [receive information from distant parents without passing it as props.](/learn/passing-props-to-a-component) For example, your app's top-level component can pass the current UI theme to all components below, no matter how deep. * [`useContext`](/reference/react/useContext) reads and subscribes to a context. ```js function Button() { const theme = useContext(ThemeContext); // ... ``` --- ## Ref Hooks {/*ref-hooks*/} *Refs* let a component [hold some information that isn't used for rendering,](/learn/referencing-values-with-refs) like a DOM node or a timeout ID. Unlike with state, updating a ref does not re-render your component. Refs are an "escape hatch" from the React paradigm. They are useful when you need to work with non-React systems, such as the built-in browser APIs. * [`useRef`](/reference/react/useRef) declares a ref. You can hold any value in it, but most often it's used to hold a DOM node. * [`useImperativeHandle`](/reference/react/useImperativeHandle) lets you customize the ref exposed by your component. This is rarely used. ```js function Form() { const inputRef = useRef(null); // ... ``` --- ## Effect Hooks {/*effect-hooks*/} *Effects* let a component [connect to and synchronize with external systems.](/learn/synchronizing-with-effects) This includes dealing with network, browser DOM, animations, widgets written using a different UI library, and other non-React code. * [`useEffect`](/reference/react/useEffect) connects a component to an external system. ```js function ChatRoom({ roomId }) { useEffect(() => { const connection = createConnection(roomId); connection.connect(); return () => connection.disconnect(); }, [roomId]); // ... ``` Effects are an "escape hatch" from the React paradigm. Don't use Effects to orchestrate the data flow of your application. If you're not interacting with an external system, [you might not need an Effect.](/learn/you-might-not-need-an-effect) There are two rarely used variations of `useEffect` with differences in timing: * [`useLayoutEffect`](/reference/react/useLayoutEffect) fires before the browser repaints the screen. You can measure layout here. * [`useInsertionEffect`](/reference/react/useInsertionEffect) fires before React makes changes to the DOM. Libraries can insert dynamic CSS here. --- ## Performance Hooks {/*performance-hooks*/} A common way to optimize re-rendering performance is to skip unnecessary work. For example, you can tell React to reuse a cached calculation or to skip a re-render if the data has not changed since the previous render. To skip calculations and unnecessary re-rendering, use one of these Hooks: - [`useMemo`](/reference/react/useMemo) lets you cache the result of an expensive calculation. - [`useCallback`](/reference/react/useCallback) lets you cache a function definition before passing it down to an optimized component. ```js function TodoList({ todos, tab, theme }) { const visibleTodos = useMemo(() => filterTodos(todos, tab), [todos, tab]); // ... } ``` Sometimes, you can't skip re-rendering because the screen actually needs to update. In that case, you can improve performance by separating blocking updates that must be synchronous (like typing into an input) from non-blocking updates which don't need to block the user interface (like updating a chart). To prioritize rendering, use one of these Hooks: - [`useTransition`](/reference/react/useTransition) lets you mark a state transition as non-blocking and allow other updates to interrupt it. - [`useDeferredValue`](/reference/react/useDeferredValue) lets you defer updating a non-critical part of the UI and let other parts update first. --- ## Other Hooks {/*other-hooks*/} These Hooks are mostly useful to library authors and aren't commonly used in the application code. - [`useDebugValue`](/reference/react/useDebugValue) lets you customize the label React DevTools displays for your custom Hook. - [`useId`](/reference/react/useId) lets a component associate a unique ID with itself. Typically used with accessibility APIs. - [`useSyncExternalStore`](/reference/react/useSyncExternalStore) lets a component subscribe to an external store. --- ## Your own Hooks {/*your-own-hooks*/} You can also [define your own custom Hooks](/learn/reusing-logic-with-custom-hooks#extracting-your-own-custom-hook-from-a-component) as JavaScript functions.