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How to use CSS in your application

Last updated April 23, 2026

Next.js provides several ways to style your application using CSS, including:

Tailwind CSS

Tailwind CSS is a utility-first CSS framework that provides low-level utility classes to build custom designs.

Install Tailwind CSS:

pnpm

pnpm

npm

npm

yarn

yarn

bun

bun

Terminal

pnpm add -D tailwindcss @tailwindcss/postcss

Add the PostCSS plugin to your postcss.config.mjs file:

postcss.config.mjs

export default {
  plugins: {
    '@tailwindcss/postcss': {},
  },
}

Import Tailwind in your global CSS file:

styles/globals.css

@import 'tailwindcss';

Import the CSS file in your pages/_app.js file:

pages/_app.js

import '@/styles/globals.css'
 
export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) {
  return <Component {...pageProps} />
}

Now you can start using Tailwind's utility classes in your application:

pages/index.tsx

JavaScriptTypeScript

export default function Home() {
  return (
    <main className="flex min-h-screen flex-col items-center justify-between p-24">
      <h1 className="text-4xl font-bold">Welcome to Next.js!</h1>
    </main>
  )
}

Good to know: If you need broader browser support for very old browsers, see the Tailwind CSS v3 setup instructions.

CSS Modules

CSS Modules locally scope CSS by generating unique class names. This allows you to use the same class in different files without worrying about naming collisions.

To start using CSS Modules, create a new file with the extension .module.css and import it into any component inside the pages directory:

/styles/blog.module.css

.blog {
  padding: 24px;
}

pages/blog/index.tsx

JavaScriptTypeScript

import styles from './blog.module.css'
 
export default function Page() {
  return <main className={styles.blog}></main>
}

Global CSS

You can use global CSS to apply styles across your application.

Import the stylesheet in the pages/_app.js file to apply the styles to every route in your application:

pages/_app.js

import '@/styles/global.css'
 
export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) {
  return <Component {...pageProps} />
}

Due to the global nature of stylesheets, and to avoid conflicts, you should import them inside pages/_app.js.

External stylesheets

Next.js allows you to import CSS files from a JavaScript file. This is possible because Next.js extends the concept of import beyond JavaScript.

Import styles from node_modules

Since Next.js 9.5.4, importing a CSS file from node_modules is permitted anywhere in your application.

For global stylesheets, like bootstrap or nprogress, you should import the file inside pages/_app.js. For example:

pages/_app.js

import 'bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.css'
 
export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) {
  return <Component {...pageProps} />
}

To import CSS required by a third-party component, you can do so in your component. For example:

components/example-dialog.js

import { useState } from 'react'
import { Dialog } from '@reach/dialog'
import VisuallyHidden from '@reach/visually-hidden'
import '@reach/dialog/styles.css'
 
function ExampleDialog(props) {
  const [showDialog, setShowDialog] = useState(false)
  const open = () => setShowDialog(true)
  const close = () => setShowDialog(false)
 
  return (
    <div>
      <button onClick={open}>Open Dialog</button>
      <Dialog isOpen={showDialog} onDismiss={close}>
        <button className="close-button" onClick={close}>
          <VisuallyHidden>Close</VisuallyHidden>
          <span aria-hidden>×</span>
        </button>
        <p>Hello there. I am a dialog</p>
      </Dialog>
    </div>
  )
}

Ordering and Merging

Next.js optimizes CSS during production builds by automatically chunking (merging) stylesheets. The order of your CSS depends on the order you import styles in your code.

For example, base-button.module.css will be ordered before page.module.css since <BaseButton> is imported before page.module.css:

page.tsx

JavaScriptTypeScript

import { BaseButton } from './base-button'
import styles from './page.module.css'
 
export default function Page() {
  return <BaseButton className={styles.primary} />
}

base-button.tsx

JavaScriptTypeScript

import styles from './base-button.module.css'
 
export function BaseButton() {
  return <button className={styles.primary} />
}

Recommendations

To keep CSS ordering predictable:

Development vs Production

Next Steps

Learn more about the features mentioned in this page.

[

Tailwind CSS

Style your Next.js Application using Tailwind CSS.

](/docs/pages/guides/tailwind-v3-css)[

Sass

Learn how to use Sass in your Next.js application.

](/docs/pages/guides/sass)[

CSS-in-JS

Use CSS-in-JS libraries with Next.js

](/docs/pages/guides/css-in-js)

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