When creating routes, you can optionally specify a staticData property in the route's options. This object can literally contain anything you want as long as it's synchronously available when you create your route.
In addition to being able to access this data from the route itself, you can also access it from any match under the match.staticData property.
Example
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You can then access this data anywhere you have access to your routes, including matches that can be mapped back to their routes.
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Enforcing Static Data
If you want to enforce that a route has static data, you can use declaration merging to add a type to the route's static option:
declare module '@tanstack/react-router' {
interface StaticDataRouteOption {
customData: string
}
}
Now, if you try to create a route without the customData property, you'll get a type error:
export const Route = createFileRoute('/posts')({
staticData: {
// Property 'customData' is missing in type '{ customData: number; }' but required in type 'StaticDataRouteOption'.ts(2741)
},
})
Optional Static Data
If you want to make static data optional, simply add a ? to the property:
declare module '@tanstack/react-router' {
interface StaticDataRouteOption {
customData?: string
}
}
As long as there are any required properties on the StaticDataRouteOption, you'll be required to pass in an object.
Common Patterns
Controlling Layout Visibility
Use staticData to control which routes show or hide layout elements:
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Route Titles for Breadcrumbs
When to Use staticData vs Context
| staticData | context |
|---|
| Synchronous, defined at route creation | Can be async (via beforeLoad) |
| Available before loading starts | Can depend on params/search |
| Same for all instances of a route | Passed down to child routes |
Use staticData for static route metadata. Use context for dynamic data or auth state that varies per request.