Lazy Loading and Performance Optimization
Loading all images in a slider at once can slow down your application, especially when working with large images or many slides. Lazy loading improves performance by loading images only when they are about to appear on screen.
In SwiperJS, lazy loading is handled using the browser's built-in image loading behavior. To enable it, you simply add the loading="lazy" attribute to images inside your slides. The browser will then delay loading each image until it is needed.
This approach reduces initial load time, lowers memory usage, and helps your slider feel faster and more responsiveβespecially on mobile devices or slower networks.
Here is an example of a SwiperJS slider in React with lazy-loaded images:
import { Swiper, SwiperSlide } from "swiper/react";
import "swiper/css/bundle";
function LazySwiper() {
return (
<Swiper spaceBetween={20} slidesPerView={1}>
<SwiperSlide>
<img
src="https://picsum.photos/600/300?random=1"
loading="lazy"
alt="Slide 1"
style={{ width: "100%", borderRadius: "12px" }}
/>
</SwiperSlide>
<SwiperSlide>
<img
src="https://picsum.photos/600/300?random=2"
loading="lazy"
alt="Slide 2"
style={{ width: "100%", borderRadius: "12px" }}
/>
</SwiperSlide>
</Swiper>
);
}
Thanks for your feedback!
Ask AI
Ask AI
Ask anything or try one of the suggested questions to begin our chat
Awesome!
Completion rate improved to 7.69
Lazy Loading and Performance Optimization
Swipe to show menu
Loading all images in a slider at once can slow down your application, especially when working with large images or many slides. Lazy loading improves performance by loading images only when they are about to appear on screen.
In SwiperJS, lazy loading is handled using the browser's built-in image loading behavior. To enable it, you simply add the loading="lazy" attribute to images inside your slides. The browser will then delay loading each image until it is needed.
This approach reduces initial load time, lowers memory usage, and helps your slider feel faster and more responsiveβespecially on mobile devices or slower networks.
Here is an example of a SwiperJS slider in React with lazy-loaded images:
import { Swiper, SwiperSlide } from "swiper/react";
import "swiper/css/bundle";
function LazySwiper() {
return (
<Swiper spaceBetween={20} slidesPerView={1}>
<SwiperSlide>
<img
src="https://picsum.photos/600/300?random=1"
loading="lazy"
alt="Slide 1"
style={{ width: "100%", borderRadius: "12px" }}
/>
</SwiperSlide>
<SwiperSlide>
<img
src="https://picsum.photos/600/300?random=2"
loading="lazy"
alt="Slide 2"
style={{ width: "100%", borderRadius: "12px" }}
/>
</SwiperSlide>
</Swiper>
);
}
Thanks for your feedback!