Routes are configured by rendering <Routes> and <Route> that couple URL segments to UI elements.
import React from "react"; import ReactDOM from "react-dom/client"; import { BrowserRouter, Routes, Route } from "react-router"; import App from "./app";  const root = document.getElementById("root");  ReactDOM.createRoot(root).render(  <BrowserRouter>  <Routes>  <Route path="/" element={<App />} />  </Routes>  </BrowserRouter>, ); Here's a larger sample config:
<Routes>  <Route index element={<Home />} />  <Route path="about" element={<About />} />   <Route element={<AuthLayout />}>  <Route path="login" element={<Login />} />  <Route path="register" element={<Register />} />  </Route>   <Route path="concerts">  <Route index element={<ConcertsHome />} />  <Route path=":city" element={<City />} />  <Route path="trending" element={<Trending />} />  </Route> </Routes> Routes can be nested inside parent routes.
<Routes>  <Route path="dashboard" element={<Dashboard />}>  <Route index element={<Home />} />  <Route path="settings" element={<Settings />} />  </Route> </Routes> The path of the parent is automatically included in the child, so this config creates both "/dashboard" and "/dashboard/settings" URLs.
Child routes are rendered through the <Outlet/> in the parent route.
import { Outlet } from "react-router";  export default function Dashboard() {  return (  <div>  <h1>Dashboard</h1>  {/* will either be <Home/> or <Settings/> */}  <Outlet />  </div>  ); } Routes without a path create new nesting for their children, but they don't add any segments to the URL.
<Routes>  <Route element={<MarketingLayout />}>  <Route index element={<MarketingHome />} />  <Route path="contact" element={<Contact />} />  </Route>   <Route path="projects">  <Route index element={<ProjectsHome />} />  <Route element={<ProjectsLayout />}>  <Route path=":pid" element={<Project />} />  <Route path=":pid/edit" element={<EditProject />} />  </Route>  </Route> </Routes> Index routes render into their parent's <Outlet/> at their parent's URL (like a default child route). They are configured with the index prop:
<Routes>  <Route path="/" element={<Root />}>  {/* renders into the outlet in <Root> at "/" */}  <Route index element={<Home />} />   <Route path="dashboard" element={<Dashboard />}>  {/* renders into the outlet in <Dashboard> at "/dashboard" */}  <Route index element={<DashboardHome />} />  <Route path="settings" element={<Settings />} />  </Route>  </Route> </Routes> Note that index routes can't have children. If you're expecting that behavior, you probably want a layout route.
A <Route path> without an element prop adds a path prefix to its child routes, without introducing a parent layout.
<Route path="projects">  <Route index element={<ProjectsHome />} />  <Route element={<ProjectsLayout />}>  <Route path=":pid" element={<Project />} />  <Route path=":pid/edit" element={<EditProject />} />  </Route> </Route> If a path segment starts with : then it becomes a "dynamic segment". When the route matches the URL, the dynamic segment will be parsed from the URL and provided as params to other router APIs like useParams.
<Route path="teams/:teamId" element={<Team />} /> import { useParams } from "react-router";  export default function Team() {  let params = useParams();  // params.teamId } You can have multiple dynamic segments in one route path:
<Route  path="/c/:categoryId/p/:productId"  element={<Product />} /> import { useParams } from "react-router";  export default function CategoryProduct() {  let { categoryId, productId } = useParams();  // ... } You should ensure that all dynamic segments in a given path are unique. Otherwise, as the params object is populated - latter dynamic segment values will override earlier values.
You can make a route segment optional by adding a ? to the end of the segment.
<Route path=":lang?/categories" element={<Categories />} /> You can have optional static segments, too:
<Route path="users/:userId/edit?" element={<User />} /> Also known as "catchall" and "star" segments. If a route path pattern ends with /* then it will match any characters following the /, including other / characters.
<Route path="files/*" element={<File />} /> let params = useParams(); // params["*"] will contain the remaining URL after files/ let filePath = params["*"]; You can destructure the *, you just have to assign it a new name. A common name is splat:
let { "*": splat } = useParams(); Link to routes from your UI with Link and NavLink
import { NavLink, Link } from "react-router";  function Header() {  return (  <nav>  {/* NavLink makes it easy to show active states */}  <NavLink  to="/"  className={({ isActive }) =>  isActive ? "active" : ""  }  >  Home  </NavLink>   <Link to="/concerts/salt-lake-city">Concerts</Link>  </nav>  ); } Next: Navigating