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The BadgeUnstyled component generates a small label that is attached to its child element.

Introduction

A badge is a small descriptor for UI elements. It typically sits on or near an element and indicates the status of that element by displaying a number, icon, or other short set of characters.

The BadgeUnstyled component creates a badge that is applied to its child element.

Component

Usage

After installation, you can start building with this component using the following basic elements:

import BadgeUnstyled from '@mui/base/BadgeUnstyled';

export default function MyApp() {
  return (
    <BadgeUnstyled>{/* the element that the badge is attached to */}</BadgeUnstyled>
  );
}

Basics

BadgeUnstyled wraps around the UI element that it's attached to. For instance, if the badge indicates the number of emails in an inbox, then the component will be structured like this:

<BadgeUnstyled>
  <MailIcon />
</BadgeUnstyled>

Anatomy

The BadgeUnstyled component is composed of a root <span> that houses the element that the badge is attached to, followed by a <span> slot to represent the badge itself:

<span class="BaseBadge-root">
  <!-- the element the badge is attached to is nested here -->
  <span class="BaseBadge-badge">badge content</span>
</span>

Slot props

Use the component prop to override the root slot with a custom element:

<BadgeUnstyled component="div" />

Use the components prop to override any interior slots in addition to the root:

<BadgeUnstyled components={{ Root: 'div', Badge: 'div' }} />

Use the componentsProps prop to pass custom props to internal slots. The following code snippet applies a CSS class called my-badge to the badge slot:

<BadgeUnstyled componentsProps={{ badge: { className: 'my-badge' } }} />

Hook

import { useBadge } from '@mui/base/BadgeUnstyled';

The useBadge hook lets you apply the functionality of BadgeUnstyled to a fully custom component. It returns props to be placed on the custom component, along with fields representing the component's internal state.

Hooks do not support slot props, but they do support customization props.

Customization

Badge content

The badgeContent prop defines the content that's displayed inside the badge. When this content is a number, there are additional props you can use for further customization—see the Numerical badges section below.

The following demo shows how to create and style a typical numerical badge that's attached to a generic box element:

5

Badge visibility

You can control the visibility of a badge by using the invisible prop. Setting a badge to invisible does not actually hide it—instead, this prop adds the BaseBadge-invisible class to the badge, which you can target with styles to hide however you prefer:

1
1

Numerical badges

The following props are useful when badgeContent is a number.

The showZero prop

By default, badges automatically hide when badgeContent={0}. You can override this behavior with the showZero prop:

0
<StyledBadge badgeContent={0}>
  <MailIcon />
</StyledBadge>
<StyledBadge badgeContent={0} showZero>
  <MailIcon />
</StyledBadge>

The max prop

You can use the max prop to set a maximum value for badgeContent. The default is 99.

9999+999+
<StyledBadge badgeContent={99}>
  <MailIcon />
</StyledBadge>
<StyledBadge badgeContent={100}>
  <MailIcon />
</StyledBadge>
<StyledBadge badgeContent={1000} max={999}>
  <MailIcon />
</StyledBadge>

Accessibility

Screen readers may not provide users with enough information about a badge's contents. To make your badge accessible, you must provide a full description with aria-label, as shown in the demo below:

99+
<StyledBadge badgeContent={100}>
  <MailIcon />
</StyledBadge>