MUI Core contains foundational React UI component libraries for shipping new features faster:
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Material UI is a comprehensive library of components that features our implementation of Google's Material Design system.
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Joy UI is a library of beautifully designed React UI components built to spark joy.
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MUI System is a collection of CSS utilities to help you rapidly lay out custom designs.
Visit https://mui.com/material-ui/ to view the full documentation.
Older versions
Note: @next
only points to pre-releases.
Use @latest
for the latest stable release.
Visit https://mui.com/joy-ui/getting-started/ to view the full documentation.
Note: Joy UI is still in beta. We are adding new components regularly and you're welcome to contribute!
Visit https://mui.com/system/getting-started/ to view the full documentation.
Diamond sponsors are those who have pledged $1,500/month or more to MUI.
via Open Collective or via Patreon
Gold sponsors are those who have pledged $500/month or more to MUI.
See the full list of our backers.
For how-to questions that don't involve making changes to the code base, please use Stack Overflow instead of GitHub issues.
Our documentation features a collection of example projects.
You can find complete templates and themes in the MUI Store.
Read the contributing guide to learn about our development process, how to propose bug fixes and improvements, and how to build and test your changes.
Contributing is about more than just issues and pull requests! There are many other ways to support Material UI beyond contributing to the code base.
The changelog is regularly updated to reflect what's changed in each new release.
Future plans and high-priority features and enhancements can be found in the roadmap.
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.
For details of supported versions and contact details for reporting security issues, please refer to the security policy.
These great services sponsor MUI's core infrastructure:
GitHub lets us host the Git repository and coordinate contributions.
Netlify lets us distribute the documentation.
BrowserStack lets us test in real browsers.
CodeCov lets us monitor test coverage.