--- title: Multilingual mode linkTitle: Multilingual description: Localize your project for each language and region, including translations, images, dates, currencies, numbers, percentages, and collation sequence. Hugo's multilingual framework supports single-host and multihost configurations. categories: [content management] keywords: [multilingual,i18n,internationalization] menu: docs: parent: content-management weight: 230 weight: 230 toc: true aliases: [/content/multilingual/,/tutorials/create-a-multilingual-site/] --- ## Configure languages This is the default language configuration: {{< code-toggle config=languages />}} In the above, `en` is the language key. Language keys must conform to the syntax described in [RFC 5646]. For example: - `en` - `en-US` Artificial languages with private use subtags as defined in [RFC 5646 § 2.2.7] are also supported. Omit the `art-x-` prefix from the language key. For example: - `hugolang` {{% note %}} Private use subtags must not exceed 8 alphanumeric characters. {{% /note %}} [RFC 5646]: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5646#section-2.1 [RFC 5646 § 2.2.7]: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5646#section-2.2.7 This is an example of a site configuration for a multilingual project. Any key not defined in a `languages` object will fall back to the global value in the root of your site configuration. {{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} defaultContentLanguage = 'de' defaultContentLanguageInSubdir = true [languages.de] contentDir = 'content/de' disabled = false languageCode = 'de-DE' languageDirection = 'ltr' languageName = 'Deutsch' title = 'Projekt Dokumentation' weight = 1 [languages.de.params] subtitle = 'Referenz, Tutorials und Erklärungen' [languages.en] contentDir = 'content/en' disabled = false languageCode = 'en-US' languageDirection = 'ltr' languageName = 'English' title = 'Project Documentation' weight = 2 [languages.en.params] subtitle = 'Reference, Tutorials, and Explanations' {{< /code-toggle >}} defaultContentLanguage : (`string`) The project's default language key, conforming to the syntax described in [RFC 5646]. This value must match one of the defined language keys. Examples: - `en` - `en-GB` - `pt-BR` defaultContentLanguageInSubdir : (`bool`) If `true`, Hugo renders the default language site in a subdirectory matching the `defaultContentLanguage`. Default is `false`. contentDir : (`string`) The content directory for this language. Omit if [translating by file name]. disabled : (`bool`) If `true`, Hugo will not render content for this language. Default is `false`. languageCode : (`string`) The language tag as described in [RFC 5646]. This value does not affect localization or URLs. Hugo uses this value to populate the `language` element in the [built-in RSS template], and the `lang` attribute of the `html` element in the [built-in alias template]. Examples: - `en` - `en-GB` - `pt-BR` languageDirection : (`string`) The language direction, either left-to-right (`ltr`) or right-to-left (`rtl`). Use this value in your templates with the global [`dir`] HTML attribute. languageName : (`string`) The language name, typically used when rendering a language switcher. title : (`string`) The site title for this language (optional). weight : (`int`) The language weight. When set to a non-zero value, this is the primary sort criteria for this language. [`dir`]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Global_attributes/dir [built-in RSS template]: https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/blob/master/tpl/tplimpl/embedded/templates/_default/rss.xml [built-in alias template]: https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/blob/master/tpl/tplimpl/embedded/templates/alias.html [RFC 5646]: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5646#section-2.1 [translating by file name]: #translation-by-file-name ### Changes in Hugo 0.112.0 {{< new-in 0.112.0 >}} In Hugo `v0.112.0` we consolidated all configuration options, and improved how the languages and their parameters are merged with the main configuration. But while testing this on Hugo sites out there, we received some error reports and reverted some of the changes in favor of deprecation warnings: 1. `site.Language.Params` is deprecated. Use `site.Params` directly. 1. Adding custom parameters to the top level language configuration is deprecated. Define custom parameters within `languages.xx.params`. See `color` in the example below. {{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} title = "My blog" languageCode = "en-us" [languages] [languages.sv] title = "Min blogg" languageCode = "sv" [languages.en.params] color = "blue" {{< /code-toggle >}} In the example above, all settings except `color` below `params` map to predefined configuration options in Hugo for the site and its language, and should be accessed via the documented accessors: ```go-html-template {{ site.Title }} {{ site.LanguageCode }} {{ site.Params.color }} ``` ### Disable a language To disable a language within a `languages` object in your site configuration: {{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} [languages.es] disabled = true {{< /code-toggle >}} To disable one or more languages in the root of your site configuration: {{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} disableLanguages = ["es", "fr"] {{< /code-toggle >}} To disable one or more languages using an environment variable: ```sh HUGO_DISABLELANGUAGES="es fr" hugo ``` Note that you cannot disable the default content language. ### Configure multilingual multihost Hugo supports multiple languages in a multihost configuration. This means you can configure a `baseURL` per `language`. {{% note %}} If a `baseURL` is set on the `language` level, then all languages must have one and they must all be different. {{% /note %}} Example: {{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} [languages] [languages.en] baseURL = 'https://en.example.org/' languageName = 'English' title = 'In English' weight = 2 [languages.fr] baseURL = 'https://fr.example.org' languageName = 'Français' title = 'En Français' weight = 1 {{ code-toggle >}} With the above, the two sites will be generated into `public` with their own root: ```text public ├── en └── fr ``` **All URLs (i.e `.Permalink` etc.) will be generated from that root. So the English home page above will have its `.Permalink` set to `https://example.org/`.** When you run `hugo server` we will start multiple HTTP servers. You will typically see something like this in the console: ```text Web Server is available at 127.0.0.1:1313 (bind address 127.0.0.1) fr Web Server is available at 127.0.0.1:1314 (bind address 127.0.0.1) en Press Ctrl+C to stop ``` Live reload and `--navigateToChanged` between the servers work as expected. ## Translate your content There are two ways to manage your content translations. Both ensure each page is assigned a language and is linked to its counterpart translations. ### Translation by file name Considering the following example: 1. `/content/about.en.md` 2. `/content/about.fr.md` The first file is assigned the English language and is linked to the second. The second file is assigned the French language and is linked to the first. Their language is __assigned__ according to the language code added as a __suffix to the file name__. By having the same **path and base file name**, the content pieces are __linked__ together as translated pages. {{% note %}} If a file has no language code, it will be assigned the default language. {{% /note %}} ### Translation by content directory This system uses different content directories for each of the languages. Each language's content directory is set using the `contentDir` parameter. {{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} languages: en: weight: 10 languageName: "English" contentDir: "content/english" fr: weight: 20 languageName: "Français" contentDir: "content/french" {{< /code-toggle >}} The value of `contentDir` can be any valid path -- even absolute path references. The only restriction is that the content directories cannot overlap. Considering the following example in conjunction with the configuration above: 1. `/content/english/about.md` 2. `/content/french/about.md` The first file is assigned the English language and is linked to the second. The second file is assigned the French language and is linked to the first. Their language is __assigned__ according to the content directory they are __placed__ in. By having the same **path and basename** (relative to their language content directory), the content pieces are __linked__ together as translated pages. ### Bypassing default linking Any pages sharing the same `translationKey` set in front matter will be linked as translated pages regardless of basename or location. Considering the following example: 1. `/content/about-us.en.md` 2. `/content/om.nn.md` 3. `/content/presentation/a-propos.fr.md` {{< code-toggle >}} translationKey: "about" {{< /code-toggle >}} By setting the `translationKey` front matter parameter to `about` in all three pages, they will be __linked__ as translated pages. ### Localizing permalinks Because paths and file names are used to handle linking, all translated pages will share the same URL (apart from the language subdirectory). To localize URLs: - For a regular page, set either [`slug`] or [`url`] in front matter - For a section page, set [`url`] in front matter [`slug`]: /content-management/urls/#slug [`url`]: /content-management/urls/#url For example, a French translation can have its own localized slug. {{< code-toggle file=content/about.fr.md fm=true >}} title: A Propos slug: "a-propos" {{< /code-toggle >}} At render, Hugo will build both `/about/` and `/fr/a-propos/` without affecting the translation link. ### Page bundles To avoid the burden of having to duplicate files, each Page Bundle inherits the resources of its linked translated pages' bundles except for the content files (Markdown files, HTML files etc...). Therefore, from within a template, the page will have access to the files from all linked pages' bundles. If, across the linked bundles, two or more files share the same basename, only one will be included and chosen as follows: * File from current language bundle, if present. * First file found across bundles by order of language `Weight`. {{% note %}} Page Bundle resources follow the same language assignment logic as content files, both by file name (`image.jpg`, `image.fr.jpg`) and by directory (`english/about/header.jpg`, `french/about/header.jpg`). {{%/ note %}} ## Reference translated content To create a list of links to translated content, use a template similar to the following: {{< code file=layouts/partials/i18nlist.html >}} {{ if .IsTranslated }}