Validates that dependency arrays for React hooks contain all necessary dependencies.
Rule Details
React hooks like useEffect, useMemo, and useCallback accept dependency arrays. When a value referenced inside these hooks isn’t included in the dependency array, React won’t re-run the effect or recalculate the value when that dependency changes. This causes stale closures where the hook uses outdated values.
Common Violations
This error often happens when you try to “trick” React about dependencies to control when an effect runs. Effects should synchronize your component with external systems. The dependency array tells React which values the effect uses, so React knows when to re-synchronize.
If you find yourself fighting with the linter, you likely need to restructure your code. See Removing Effect Dependencies to learn how.
Invalid
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
// ❌ Missing dependency useEffect(() => { console.log(count); }, []); // Missing 'count' // ❌ Missing prop useEffect(() => { fetchUser(userId); }, []); // Missing 'userId' // ❌ Incomplete dependencies useMemo(() => { return items.sort(sortOrder); }, [items]); // Missing 'sortOrder'
Valid
Examples of correct code for this rule:
// ✅ All dependencies included useEffect(() => { console.log(count); }, [count]); // ✅ All dependencies included useEffect(() => { fetchUser(userId); }, [userId]);
Troubleshooting
Adding a function dependency causes infinite loops
You have an effect, but you’re creating a new function on every render:
// ❌ Causes infinite loop const logItems = () => { console.log(items); }; useEffect(() => { logItems(); }, [logItems]); // Infinite loop!
In most cases, you don’t need the effect. Call the function where the action happens instead:
// ✅ Call it from the event handler const logItems = () => { console.log(items); }; return <button onClick={logItems}>Log</button>; // ✅ Or derive during render if there's no side effect items.forEach(item => { console.log(item); });
If you genuinely need the effect (for example, to subscribe to something external), make the dependency stable:
// ✅ useCallback keeps the function reference stable const logItems = useCallback(() => { console.log(items); }, [items]); useEffect(() => { logItems(); }, [logItems]); // ✅ Or move the logic straight into the effect useEffect(() => { console.log(items); }, [items]);
Running an effect only once
You want to run an effect once on mount, but the linter complains about missing dependencies:
// ❌ Missing dependency useEffect(() => { sendAnalytics(userId); }, []); // Missing 'userId'
Either include the dependency (recommended) or use a ref if you truly need to run once:
// ✅ Include dependency useEffect(() => { sendAnalytics(userId); }, [userId]); // ✅ Or use a ref guard inside an effect const sent = useRef(false); useEffect(() => { if (sent.current) { return; } sent.current = true; sendAnalytics(userId); }, [userId]);
Options
You can configure custom effect hooks using shared ESLint settings (available in eslint-plugin-react-hooks 6.1.1 and later):
{ "settings": { "react-hooks": { "additionalEffectHooks": "(useMyEffect|useCustomEffect)" } } }
additionalEffectHooks: Regex pattern matching custom hooks that should be checked for exhaustive dependencies. This configuration is shared across allreact-hooksrules.
For backward compatibility, this rule also accepts a rule-level option:
{ "rules": { "react-hooks/exhaustive-deps": ["warn", { "additionalHooks": "(useMyCustomHook|useAnotherHook)" }] } }
additionalHooks: Regex for hooks that should be checked for exhaustive dependencies. Note: If this rule-level option is specified, it takes precedence over the sharedsettingsconfiguration.