✨ https://zod.dev ✨
TypeScript-first schema validation with static type inference
Zod is a TypeScript-first validation library. Define a schema and parse some data with it. You'll get back a strongly typed, validated result.
import { z } from "zod/v4";
const User = z.object({
name: z.string(),
});
// some untrusted data...
const input = { /* stuff */ };
// the parsed result is validated and type safe!
const data = User.parse(input);
// so you can use it with confidence :)
console.log(data.name);
- Zero external dependencies
- Works in Node.js and all modern browsers
- Tiny:
2kb
core bundle (gzipped) - Immutable API: methods return a new instance
- Concise interface
- Works with TypeScript and plain JS
- Built-in JSON Schema conversion
- Extensive ecosystem
npm install zod
Before you can do anything else, you need to define a schema. For the purposes of this guide, we'll use a simple object schema.
import { z } from "zod/v4";
const Player = z.object({
username: z.string(),
xp: z.number()
});
Given any Zod schema, use .parse
to validate an input. If it's valid, Zod returns a strongly-typed deep clone of the input.
Player.parse({ username: "billie", xp: 100 });
// => returns { username: "billie", xp: 100 }
Note — If your schema uses certain asynchronous APIs like async
refinements or transforms, you'll need to use the .parseAsync()
method instead.
const schema = z.string().refine(async (val) => val.length <= 8);
await schema.parseAsync("hello");
// => "hello"
When validation fails, the .parse()
method will throw a ZodError
instance with granular information about the validation issues.
try {
Player.parse({ username: 42, xp: "100" });
} catch(err){
if(error instanceof z.ZodError){
err.issues;
/* [
{
expected: 'string',
code: 'invalid_type',
path: [ 'username' ],
message: 'Invalid input: expected string'
},
{
expected: 'number',
code: 'invalid_type',
path: [ 'xp' ],
message: 'Invalid input: expected number'
}
] */
}
}
To avoid a try/catch
block, you can use the .safeParse()
method to get back a plain result object containing either the successfully parsed data or a ZodError
. The result type is a discriminated union, so you can handle both cases conveniently.
const result = Player.parse({ username: 42, xp: "100" });
if (!result.success) {
result.error; // ZodError instance
} else {
result.data; // { username: string; xp: number }
}
Note — If your schema uses certain asynchronous APIs like async
refinements or transforms, you'll need to use the .safeParseAsync()
method instead.
const schema = z.string().refine(async (val) => val.length <= 8);
await schema.safeParseAsync("hello");
// => { success: true; data: "hello" }
Zod infers a static type from your schema definitions. You can extract this type with the z.infer<>
utility and use it however you like.
const Player = z.object({
username: z.string(),
xp: z.number()
});
// extract the inferred type
type Player = z.infer<typeof Player>;
// use it in your code
const player: Player = { username: "billie", xp: 100 };
In some cases, the input & output types of a schema can diverge. For instance, the .transform()
API can convert the input from one type to another. In these cases, you can extract the input and output types independently:
const mySchema = z.string().transform((val) => val.length);
type MySchemaIn = z.input<typeof mySchema>;
// => string
type MySchemaOut = z.output<typeof mySchema>; // equivalent to z.infer<typeof mySchema>
// number