--- title: Invalid Hook Call Warning layout: single permalink: warnings/invalid-hook-call-warning.html --- You are probably here because you got the following error message: > Hooks can only be called inside the body of a function component. There are three common reasons you might be seeing it: 1. You might have **mismatching versions** of React and React DOM. 2. You might be **breaking the [Rules of Hooks](/docs/hooks-rules.html)**. 3. You might have **more than one copy of React** in the same app. Let's look at each of these cases. ## Mismatching Versions of React and React DOM {#mismatching-versions-of-react-and-react-dom} You might be using a version of `react-dom` (< 16.8.0) or `react-native` (< 0.59) that doesn't yet support Hooks. You can run `npm ls react-dom` or `npm ls react-native` in your application folder to check which version you're using. If you find more than one of them, this might also create problems (more on that below). ## Breaking the Rules of Hooks {#breaking-the-rules-of-hooks} You can only call Hooks **while React is rendering a function component**: * ✅ Call them at the top level in the body of a function component. * ✅ Call them at the top level in the body of a [custom Hook](/docs/hooks-custom.html). **Learn more about this in the [Rules of Hooks](/docs/hooks-rules.html).** ```js{2-3,8-9} function Counter() { // ✅ Good: top-level in a function component const [count, setCount] = useState(0); // ... } function useWindowWidth() { // ✅ Good: top-level in a custom Hook const [width, setWidth] = useState(window.innerWidth); // ... } ``` To avoid confusion, it’s **not** supported to call Hooks in other cases: * 🔴 Do not call Hooks in class components. * 🔴 Do not call in event handlers. * 🔴 Do not call Hooks inside functions passed to `useMemo`, `useReducer`, or `useEffect`. If you break these rules, you might see this error. ```js{3-4,11-12,20-21} function Bad1() { function handleClick() { // 🔴 Bad: inside an event handler (to fix, move it outside!) const theme = useContext(ThemeContext); } // ... } function Bad2() { const style = useMemo(() => { // 🔴 Bad: inside useMemo (to fix, move it outside!) const theme = useContext(ThemeContext); return createStyle(theme); }); // ... } class Bad3 extends React.Component { render() { // 🔴 Bad: inside a class component useEffect(() => {}) // ... } } ``` You can use the [`eslint-plugin-react-hooks` plugin](https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-plugin-react-hooks) to catch some of these mistakes. >Note > >[Custom Hooks](/docs/hooks-custom.html) *may* call other Hooks (that's their whole purpose). This works because custom Hooks are also supposed to only be called while a function component is rendering. ## Duplicate React {#duplicate-react} In order for Hooks to work, the `react` import from your application code needs to resolve to the same module as the `react` import from inside the `react-dom` package. If these `react` imports resolve to two different exports objects, you will see this warning. This may happen if you **accidentally end up with two copies** of the `react` package. If you use Node for package management, you can run this check in your project folder: npm ls react If you see more than one React, you'll need to figure out why this happens and fix your dependency tree. For example, maybe a library you're using incorrectly specifies `react` as a dependency (rather than a peer dependency). Until that library is fixed, [Yarn resolutions](https://yarnpkg.com/lang/en/docs/selective-version-resolutions/) is one possible workaround. You can also try to debug this problem by adding some logs and restarting your development server: ```js // Add this in node_modules/react-dom/index.js window.React1 = require('react'); // Add this in your component file require('react-dom'); window.React2 = require('react'); console.log(window.React1 === window.React2); ``` If it prints `false` then you might have two Reacts and need to figure out why that happened. [This issue](https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/13991) includes some common reasons encountered by the community. This problem can also come up when you use `npm link` or an equivalent. In that case, your bundler might "see" two Reacts — one in application folder and one in your library folder. Assuming `myapp` and `mylib` are sibling folders, one possible fix is to run `npm link ../myapp/node_modules/react` from `mylib`. This should make the library use the application's React copy. >Note > >In general, React supports using multiple independent copies on one page (for example, if an app and a third-party widget both use it). It only breaks if `require('react')` resolves differently between the component and the `react-dom` copy it was rendered with. ## Other Causes {#other-causes} If none of this worked, please comment in [this issue](https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/13991) and we'll try to help. Try to create a small reproducing example — you might discover the problem as you're doing it.