Nuxt leverages Vue's [`<Transition>`](https://vuejs.org/guide/built-ins/transition.html#the-transition-component) component to apply transitions between pages and layouts.
If you are changing layouts as well as page, the page transition you set here will not run. Instead, you should set a [layout transition](/docs/getting-started/transitions#layout-transitions).
Similar to `pageTransition`, you can apply a custom `layoutTransition` to the page component using `definePageMeta`:
```vue [pages/about.vue]
<scriptsetuplang="ts">
definePageMeta({
layout: 'orange',
layoutTransition: {
name: 'slide-in'
}
})
</script>
```
## Global settings
You can customize these default transition names globally using `nuxt.config`.
Both `pageTransition` and `layoutTransition` keys accept [`TransitionProps`](https://vuejs.org/api/built-in-components.html#transition) as JSON serializable values where you can pass the `name`, `mode` and other valid transition-props of the custom CSS transition.
If you change the `name` property, you also have to rename the CSS classes accordingly.
::
To override the global transition property, use the `definePageMeta` to define page or layout transitions for a single Nuxt page and override any page or layout transitions that are defined globally in `nuxt.config` file.
```vue [pages/some-page.vue]
<scriptsetuplang="ts">
definePageMeta({
pageTransition: {
name: 'bounce',
mode: 'out-in' // default
}
})
</script>
```
## Disable Transitions
`pageTransition` and `layoutTransition` can be disabled for a specific route:
Learn more about additional [JavaScript hooks](https://vuejs.org/guide/built-ins/transition.html#javascript-hooks) available in the `Transition` component.
To apply dynamic transitions using conditional logic, you can leverage inline [middleware](/docs/guide/directory-structure/middleware) to assign a different transition name to `to.meta.pageTransition`.
Nuxt ships with an experimental implementation of the [**View Transitions API**](https://developer.chrome.com/docs/web-platform/view-transitions) (see [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/View_Transitions_API)). This is an exciting new way to implement native browser transitions which (among other things) have the ability to transition between unrelated elements on different pages.
The Nuxt integration is under active development, but can be enabled with the `experimental.viewTransition` option in your configuration file:
```ts [nuxt.config.ts]
export default defineNuxtConfig({
experimental: {
viewTransition: true
}
})
```
If you are also using Vue transitions like `pageTransition` and `layoutTransition` (see above) to achieve the same result as the new View Transitions API, then you may wish to _disable_ Vue transitions if the user's browser supports the newer, native web API. You can do this by creating `~/middleware/disable-vue-transitions.global.ts` with the following contents:
```js
export default defineNuxtRouteMiddleware(to => {
if (!document.startViewTransition) { return }
// Disable built-in Vue transitions
to.meta.pageTransition = false
to.meta.layoutTransition = false
})
```
### Known issues
- View transitions may not work as expected with nested pages/layouts/async components owing to this upstream Vue bug: <https://github.com/vuejs/core/issues/5513>. If you make use of this pattern, you may need to delay adopting this experimental feature or implement it yourself. Feedback is very welcome.
- If you perform data fetching within your page setup functions, that you may wish to reconsider using this feature for the moment. (By design, View Transitions completely freeze DOM updates whilst they are taking place.) We're looking at restrict the View Transition to the final moments before `<Suspense>` resolves, but in the interim you may want to consider carefully whether to adopt this feature if this describes you.