314

In Laravel v4 I was able to get the current route name using...

Route::currentRouteName()

How can I do it in Laravel v5 and Laravel v6?

4

35 Answers 35

598

Try this

Route::getCurrentRoute()->getPath();

or

\Request::route()->getName()

from v5.1

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
$currentPath= Route::getFacadeRoot()->current()->uri();

Laravel v5.2

Route::currentRouteName(); //use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;

Or if you need the action name

Route::getCurrentRoute()->getActionName();

Laravel 5.2 route documentation

Retrieving The Request URI

The path method returns the request's URI. So, if the incoming request is targeted at http://example.com/foo/bar, the path method will return foo/bar:

$uri = $request->path();

The is method allows you to verify that the incoming request URI matches a given pattern. You may use the * character as a wildcard when utilizing this method:

if ($request->is('admin/*')) {
    //
}

To get the full URL, not just the path info, you may use the url method on the request instance:

$url = $request->url();

Laravel v5.3 ... v5.8

$route = Route::current();

$name = Route::currentRouteName();

$action = Route::currentRouteAction();

Laravel 5.3 route documentation

Laravel v6.x...7.x

$route = Route::current();

$name = Route::currentRouteName();

$action = Route::currentRouteAction();

** Current as of Nov 11th 2019 - version 6.5 **

Laravel 6.x route documentation

There is an option to use request to get route

$request->route()->getName();
9
  • Do you have an idea how to filter this for instance if one only wants to print in the view api routes api/...
    – utdev
    Apr 21, 2017 at 15:34
  • 9
    Route::currentRouteName(); perfect :) Oct 27, 2017 at 18:02
  • 3
    @Daniel Dewhurst: Maybe it works on v < 5.7, but with v5.7 you must not use it statically, instead request()->route()->getName() is the way to go.
    – 1stthomas
    Nov 7, 2018 at 9:22
  • 8
    Using the request() helper function is particularly useful in views. request()->route()->getName() is the best option. Nov 11, 2018 at 20:05
  • 1
    I have used all 3 solutions in Laravel 8 version and none of them are working. // echo $route = Route::current(); echo $name = Route::currentRouteName(); echo $action = Route::currentRouteAction();
    – Kamlesh
    Jun 2, 2021 at 13:03
43

Using Laravel 5.1, you can use

\Request::route()->getName()
1
  • 2
    this also works when you put it on the view as {{ route(\Request::route()->getName()) }} . Thanks so much! Feb 5, 2016 at 12:57
29

Found a way to find the current route name works for laravel v5 , v5.1.28 and v5.2.10

Namespace

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;

and

$currentPath= Route::getFacadeRoot()->current()->uri();

For Laravel laravel v5.3 you can just use:

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;

Route::currentRouteName();
2
  • @Jonathan I believe it's always better to use the full namespace in order to avoid any potential conflict. Mar 31, 2020 at 6:08
  • any sugestion for laravel 8?
    – Kamlesh
    Jun 2, 2021 at 13:03
27

If you want to select menu on multiple routes you may do like this:

<li class="{{ (Request::is('products/*') || Request::is('products') || Request::is('product/*') ? 'active' : '') }}"><a href="{{url('products')}}"><i class="fa fa-code-fork"></i>&nbsp; Products</a></li>

Or if you want to select just single menu you may simply do like this:

<li class="{{ (Request::is('/users') ? 'active' : '') }}"><a href="{{url('/')}}"><i class="fa fa-envelope"></i>&nbsp; Users</a></li>

Also tested in Laravel 5.2

Hope this help someone.

4
  • also tested in Laravel 5.3 May 31, 2019 at 0:03
  • also tested in Laravel 7.5.2 Apr 11, 2020 at 18:37
  • tested in Laravel 5.7 May 3, 2020 at 18:07
  • This is the easiest way and it still works under Laravel 9.1 Thanks Jan 15, 2023 at 10:46
25

If you need url, not route name, you do not need to use/require any other classes:

url()->current();
3
  • This returns an error: "Call to a member function current() on a non-object". url() returns a string, not an object, so i dont think this could ever have worked. Perhaps you were thinking about some other method or object, instead of url()?
    – thelogix
    Apr 6, 2016 at 21:24
  • 1
    Nah, I use this on daily basis. Check official docs
    – Fusion
    Apr 8, 2016 at 16:49
  • 3
    I see. This only works in version 5.2 or greater. But its quite nice.
    – thelogix
    Apr 9, 2016 at 10:12
23

In laravel 7 or 8 use helper function

Get Current Route Name
request()->route()->getName()

To check if route is current better to create your own method for request class using macro

In AppServiceProvider In boot method :

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Request;
public function boot()
    {
        Request::macro('isCurrentRoute', function ($routeNames) {
            $bool = false;
            foreach (is_array($routeNames) ? $routeNames : explode(",",$routeNames) as $name) {
               if(request()->routeIs($name)) {
                   $bool = true;
                   break;
                }
             }

             return $bool;
        });
    }

You can used this method in blade or controller

request()->isCurrentRoute('foo') // string route
request()->isCurrentRoute(['bar','foo','xyz.*']) //array routes
request()->isCurrentRoute('blogs,foo,bar,xyz.*') //string route seperated by comma

You can use inbuilt laravel route method

request()->routeIs('home');
request()->routeIs('blogs.*'); //using wildcard
1
  • It should be request()->routeIs('home') in this instance to check route name or request()->is('home'). The latter Determines if the current request URI matches a pattern, while the former Determines if the route name matches a given pattern. So the former routeIs method I would suggest. Definitely not route()->is('home'). You will receive no such method error or route() method expecting 1 argument 0 given. [Source][ laravel.com/api/8.x/Illuminate/Http/Request.html ] Oct 21, 2021 at 18:33
15

In 5.2, you can use the request directly with:

$request->route()->getName();

or via the helper method:

request()->route()->getName();

Output example:

"home.index"
0
15

Laravel 5.2 You can use

$request->route()->getName()

It will give you current route name.

1
  • 7
    This is actually incorrect. the name() method will add or change the name, while the getName() method returns it. Apr 25, 2016 at 9:01
9

Accessing The Current Route

Get current route name in Blade templates

{{ Route::currentRouteName() }}

for more info https://laravel.com/docs/5.5/routing#accessing-the-current-route

0
6

Shortest way is Route facade \Route::current()->getName()

This also works in laravel 5.4.*

5

In a controller action, you could just do:

public function someAction(Request $request)
{
    $routeName = $request->route()->getName();
}

$request here is resolved by Laravel's service container.

getName() returns the route name for named routes only, null otherwise (but you could still explore the \Illuminate\Routing\Route object for something else of interest).

In other words, you should have your route defined like this to have "nameOfMyRoute" returned:

Route::get('my/some-action', [
    'as' => 'nameOfMyRoute',
    'uses' => 'MyController@someAction'
]);
0
5

You can use in template:

<?php $path = Route::getCurrentRoute()->getPath(); ?>
<?php if (starts_with($path, 'admin/')) echo "active"; ?>
0
5

In my opinion the most easiest solution is using this helper:

request()->route()->getName()

For the docs, see this link

1
  • I think it is better choice in blade. Oct 26, 2020 at 21:01
5

You can use bellow code to get route name in blade file

request()->route()->uri
4

Now in Laravel 5.3 I am seeing that can be made similarly you tried:

$route = Route::current();

$name = Route::currentRouteName();

$action = Route::currentRouteAction();

https://laravel.com/docs/5.3/routing#accessing-the-current-route

4

Accessing The Current Route(v5.3 onwards)

You may use the current, currentRouteName, and currentRouteAction methods on the Route facade to access information about the route handling the incoming request:

$route = Route::current();

$name = Route::currentRouteName();

$action = Route::currentRouteAction();

Refer to the API documentation for both the underlying class of the Route facade and Route instance to review all accessible methods.

Reference : https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/routing#accessing-the-current-route

4

Request::path(); is better, and remember to use Request;

3
$request->route()->getName();
3

first thing you may do is import namespace on the top of class.

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;

laravel v8

$route = Route::current(); // Illuminate\Routing\Route
$name = Route::currentRouteName(); // RouteName
$action = Route::currentRouteAction(); // Action

Laravel v7,6 and 5.8

$route = Route::current();

$name = Route::currentRouteName();

$action = Route::currentRouteAction();
3

use laravel helper and magic methods

request()->route()->getName()
2

Looking at \Illuminate\Routing\Router.php you can use the method currentRouteNamed() by injecting a Router in your controller method. For example:

use Illuminate\Routing\Router;
public function index(Request $request, Router $router) {
   return view($router->currentRouteNamed('foo') ? 'view1' : 'view2');
}

or using the Route facade:

public function index(Request $request) {
   return view(\Route::currentRouteNamed('foo') ? 'view1' : 'view2');
}

You could also use the method is() to check if the route is named any of the given parameters, but beware this method uses preg_match() and I've experienced it to cause strange behaviour with dotted route names (like 'foo.bar.done'). There is also the matter of performance around preg_match() which is a big subject in the PHP community.

public function index(Request $request) {
    return view(\Route::is('foo', 'bar') ? 'view1' : 'view2');
}
2

It doesn't need to memorize anything, when you would like some variable of Request, by dd(request()) can assess which variable is prominent for you. In the below image, it is clear. enter image description here

So, if you would like to get the path, obviously, this code will show

dd(request()->getpathInfo())

don't forget to embed use Illuminate\Http\Request; For instance:

if(request()->getpathInfo()=="/logadmin"){
do somethings....
}
1

In a Helper file,

Your can use Route::current()->uri() to get current URL.

Hence, If you compare your route name to set active class on menu then it would be good if you use

Route::currentRouteName() to get the name of route and compare

1

I have used for getting route name in larvel 5.3

Request::path()

1

Solution :

$routeArray = app('request')->route()->getAction();
$controllerAction = class_basename($routeArray['controller']);
list($controller, $route) = explode('@', $controllerAction);
echo $route;
1

You can use below method :

Route::getCurrentRoute()->getPath();

In Laravel version > 6.0, You can use below methods:

$route = Route::current();

$name = Route::currentRouteName();

$action = Route::currentRouteAction();
1
  • Gettings error: Call to undefined method Laravel\Lumen\Routing\Router::current()
    – Kamlesh
    Oct 22, 2021 at 8:15
1

Accesing the Current Route Name in Controller

ie - http://localhost/your_project_name/edit

$request->segment(1);  // edit

( or )

$request->url();  // http://localhost/your_project_name/edit
1
\Request::path()

I use this to get current uri

1

Here is what i use, i don't know why no one mentioned it, because it worked perfectly fine for me.

Route::getCurrentRoute()->uri ; // this returns a string like '/home'


So i use it in my master.blade.php file :

...

@if ( Route::getCurrentRoute()->uri =='/dashbord' )
   @include('navbar')
@endif
...

witch really helped me re use the same views without duplicating code.
1

use helper:

app('request')->route()->getName()

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