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Astro provides several ways for you to use images on your site, whether they are stored locally inside your project, linked to from an external URL, or managed in a CMS or CDN!

We recommend that local images are kept in src/ when possible so that Astro can transform, optimize and bundle them. Files in the /public directory are always served or copied into the build folder as-is, with no processing.

Your local images stored in src/ can be used by all files in your project: .astro, .md, .mdx, .mdoc, and other UI frameworks. Images can be stored in any folder, including alongside your content.

Store your images in the public/ folder if you want to avoid any processing or to have a direct public link to them.

You can also choose to store your images remotely, in a content management system (CMS) or digital asset management (DAM) platform.

For extra protection when dealing with external sources, remote images will only be processed from authorized image sources specified in your configuration. However, any remote images can be displayed.

Astro can fetch your data remotely using APIs or display images from their full URL path. See our CMS guides for examples of integrating common services.

In .astro files, local images must be imported into the file in order to be used. Remote and public/ images do not require importing.

Import and use Astro’s built-in <Image /> component for optimized images using astro:assets. Alternatively, Astro syntax supports writing an HTML <img> tag directly, which skips image processing.

src/pages/blog/my-images.astro
---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import localBirdImage from '../../images/subfolder/localBirdImage.png';
---
<Image src={localBirdImage} alt="A bird sitting on a nest of eggs." />
<Image src="/images/bird-in-public-folder.jpg" alt="A bird." width="50" height="50" />
<Image src="https://example.com/remote-bird.jpg" alt="A bird." width="50" height="50" />
<img src={localBirdImage.src} alt="A bird sitting on a nest of eggs.">
<img src="/images/bird-in-public-folder.jpg" alt="A bird.">
<img src="https://example.com/remote-bird.jpg" alt="A bird.">

To dynamically import images from the src/ folder, see the following recipe:

Use the built-in <Image /> Astro component to display optimized versions of your local images and configured remote images.

Images in the public/ folder, as well as remote images not specifically configured in your project, can also be used with the Image component, but will not be processed.

<Image /> can transform a local or authorized remote image’s dimensions, file type, and quality for control over your displayed image. The resulting <img> tag includes alt, loading, and decoding attributes and infers image dimensions to avoid Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS).

src/components/MyComponent.astro
---
// import the Image component and the image
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import myImage from '../assets/my_image.png'; // Image is 1600x900
---
<!-- `alt` is mandatory on the Image component -->
<Image src={myImage} alt="A description of my image." />
<!-- Output -->
<!-- Image is optimized, proper attributes are enforced -->
<img
src="/_astro/my_image.hash.webp"
width="1600"
height="900"
decoding="async"
loading="lazy"
alt="A description of my image."
/>

The format of the src value of your image file depends on where your image file is located:

  • Local images in src/ - you must also import the image using a relative file path or configure and use an import alias. Then use the import name as the src value:

    src/pages/index.astro
    ---
    import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
    import myImportedImage from '../assets/my-local-image.png';
    ---
    <Image src={myImportedImage} alt="descriptive text" />
  • Images in the public/ folder - use the image’s file path relative to the public folder:

    src/pages/index.astro
    ---
    import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
    ---
    <Image
    src="/images/my-public-image.png"
    alt="descriptive text"
    width="200"
    height="150"
    />
  • Remote images - use the image’s full URL as the property value:

    src/pages/index.astro
    ---
    import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
    ---
    <Image
    src="https://example.com/remote-image.jpg"
    alt="descriptive text"
    width="200"
    height="150"
    />

Use the required alt attribute to provide a string of descriptive alt text for images.

If an image is merely decorative (i.e. doesn’t contribute to the understanding of the page), set alt="" so that screen readers and other assistive technologies know to ignore the image.

width and height (required for images in public/)
Section titled width and height (required for images in public/)

These properties define the dimensions to use for the image.

When using images in their original aspect ratio, width and height are optional. These dimensions can be automatically inferred from image files located in src/ and from remote images with inferSize set to true.

However, both of these properties are required for images stored in your public/ folder as Astro is unable to analyze these files.

Hinzugefügt in: astro@3.3.0

A list of pixel densities to generate for the image.

If provided, this value will be used to generate a srcset attribute on the <img> tag. Do not provide a value for widths when using this value.

Densities that are equal to widths larger than the original image will be ignored to avoid upscaling the image.

src/components/MyComponent.astro
---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import myImage from '../assets/my_image.png';
---
<Image
src={myImage}
width={myImage.width / 2}
densities={[1.5, 2]}
alt="A description of my image."
/>
<!-- Output -->
<img
src="/_astro/my_image.hash.webp"
srcset="
/_astro/my_image.hash.webp 1.5x
/_astro/my_image.hash.webp 2x
"
alt="A description of my image."
width="800"
height="450"
loading="lazy"
decoding="async"
/>

Hinzugefügt in: astro@3.3.0

A list of widths to generate for the image.

If provided, this value will be used to generate a srcset attribute on the <img> tag. A sizes property must also be provided.

Do not provide a value for densities when using this value. Only one of these two values can be used to generate a srcset.

Widths that are larger than the original image will be ignored to avoid upscaling the image.

---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import myImage from '../assets/my_image.png'; // Image is 1600x900
---
<Image
src={myImage}
widths={[240, 540, 720, myImage.width]}
sizes={`(max-width: 360px) 240px, (max-width: 720px) 540px, (max-width: 1600px) 720px, ${myImage.width}px`}
alt="A description of my image."
/>
<!-- Output -->
<img
src="/_astro/my_image.hash.webp"
srcset="
/_astro/my_image.hash.webp 240w,
/_astro/my_image.hash.webp 540w,
/_astro/my_image.hash.webp 720w,
/_astro/my_image.hash.webp 1600w
"
sizes="
(max-width: 360px) 240px,
(max-width: 720px) 540px,
(max-width: 1600px) 720px,
1600px
"
alt="A description of my image."
width="1600"
height="900"
loading="lazy"
decoding="async"
/>

You can optionally state the image file type output to be used.

By default, the <Image /> component will produce a .webp file.

quality is an optional property that can either be:

  • a preset (low, mid, high, max) that is automatically normalized between formats.
  • a number from 0 to 100 (interpreted differently between formats).

Hinzugefügt in: astro@4.4.0

Allows you to set the original width and height of a remote image automatically.

By default, this value is set to false and you must manually specify both dimensions for your remote image.

Add inferSize to the <Image /> component (or inferSize: true to getImage()) to infer these values from the image content when fetched. This is helpful if you don’t know the dimensions of the remote image, or if they might change:

---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
---
<Image src="https://example.com/cat.png" inferSize alt="A cat sleeping in the sun." />

inferSize can fetch the dimensions of a remote image from a domain that has not been authorized, however the image itself will remain unprocessed.

In addition to the properties above, the <Image /> component accepts all properties accepted by the HTML <img> tag.

For example, you can provide a class to the final <img> element.

src/pages/index.astro
---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import myImage from '../assets/my_image.png';
---
<!-- `alt` is mandatory on the Image component -->
<Image src={myImage} alt="" class="my-class" />
<!-- Output -->
<img
src="/_astro/my_image.hash.webp"
width="1600"
height="900"
decoding="async"
loading="lazy"
class="my-class"
alt=""
/>

Currently, there is no way to specify default values for all <Image /> components. Required attributes should be set on each individual component.

As an alternative, you can wrap these components in another Astro component for reuse. For example, you could create a component for your blog post images:

src/components/BlogPostImage.astro
---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
const { src, ...attrs } = Astro.props;
---
<Image src={src} {...attrs} />
<style>
img :global(img), svg {
margin-block: 2.5rem;
border-radius: 0.75rem;
}
</style>

Hinzugefügt in: astro@3.3.0

Use the built-in <Picture /> Astro component to display a responsive image with multiple formats and/or sizes.

src/pages/index.astro
---
import { Picture } from 'astro:assets';
import myImage from '../assets/my_image.png'; // Image is 1600x900
---
<!-- `alt` is mandatory on the Picture component -->
<Picture src={myImage} formats={['avif', 'webp']} alt="A description of my image." />
<!-- Output -->
<picture>
<source srcset="/_astro/my_image.hash.avif" type="image/avif" />
<source srcset="/_astro/my_image.hash.webp" type="image/webp" />
<img
src="/_astro/my_image.hash.png"
width="1600"
height="900"
decoding="async"
loading="lazy"
alt="A description of my image."
/>
</picture>

<Picture /> accepts all the properties of the <Image /> component, plus the following:

An array of image formats to use for the <source> tags. Entries will be added as <source> elements in the order they are listed, and this order determines which format is displayed. For the best performance, list the most modern format first (e.g. webp or avif). By default, this is set to ['webp'].

Format to use as a fallback value for the <img> tag.

Defaults to .png for static images (or .jpg if the image is a JPG), .gif for animated images, and .svg for SVG files.

An object of attributes to be added to the <picture> tag.

Use this property to apply attributes to the outer <picture> element itself. Attributes applied to the <Picture /> component directly will apply to the inner <img> element, except for those used for image transformation.

src/components/MyComponent.astro
---
import { Picture } from "astro:assets";
import myImage from "../my_image.png"; // Image is 1600x900
---
<Picture
src={myImage}
alt="A description of my image."
pictureAttributes={{ style: "background-color: red;" }}
/>
<!-- Output -->
<picture style="background-color: red;">
<source srcset="/_astro/my_image.hash.webp" type="image/webp" />
<img
src="/_astro/my_image.hash.png"
alt="A description of my image."
width="1600"
height="900"
loading="lazy"
decoding="async"
/>
</picture>

The Astro template syntax also supports writing an <img> tag directly, with full control over its final output. These images will not be processed and optimized.

It accepts all HTML <img> tag properties, and the only required property is src.

Local images must be imported from the relative path from the existing .astro file, or configure and use an import alias. Then, you can access the image’s src and other properties to use in the <img> tag.

For example, use the image’s own height and width properties to avoid CLS and improve Core Web Vitals.

src/pages/posts/post-1.astro
---
// import local images
import myDog from '../../images/pets/local-dog.jpg';
---
// access the image properties
<img src={myDog.src} width={myDog.width} height={myDog.height} alt="A barking dog." />

Imported image assets match the following signature:

interface ImageMetadata {
src: string;
width: number;
height: number;
format: string;
}

For images located within public/ use the image’s file path relative to the public folder as the src value:

<img src="/images/public-cat.jpg" alt="A sleeping cat." >

For remote images, use the image’s full URL as the src value:

<img src="https://example.com/remote-cat.jpg" alt="A sleeping cat." >

The <Image /> component optimizes your image and infers width and height (of local images) based on the original aspect ratio to avoid CLS.

Use the HTML <img> element when you cannot use the <Image /> component, for example:

  • for unsupported image formats
  • when you do not want your image optimized by Astro
  • to access and change the src attribute dynamically client-side

You can configure lists of authorized image source URL domains and patterns for image optimization using image.domains and image.remotePatterns. This configuration is an extra layer of safety to protect your site when showing images from an external source.

Remote images from other sources will not be optimized, but using the <Image /> component for these images will prevent Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS).

For example, the following configuration will only allow remote images from astro.build to be optimized:

astro.config.mjs
export default defineConfig({
image: {
domains: ["astro.build"],
}
});

The following configuration will only allow remote images from HTTPS hosts:

astro.config.mjs
export default defineConfig({
image: {
remotePatterns: [{ protocol: "https" }],
}
});

Using Images from a CMS or CDN

Section titled Using Images from a CMS or CDN

Image CDNs work with all Astro image options. Use an image’s full URL as the src attribute in the <Image /> component, an <img> tag, or in Markdown notation. For image optimization with remote images, also configure your authorized domains or URL patterns.

Alternatively, if the CDN provides a Node.js SDK, you can use that in your project. For example, Cloudinary’s SDK can generate an <img> tag with the appropriate src for you.

Use standard Markdown ![alt](src) syntax in your .md files. This syntax works with Astro’s Image Service API to optimize your local images and authorized remote images.

src/pages/post-1.md
# My Markdown Page
<!-- Local image stored in src/assets/ -->
<!-- Use a relative file path or import alias -->
![A starry night sky.](../assets/stars.png)
<!-- Image stored in public/images/ -->
<!-- Use the file path relative to public/ -->
![A starry night sky.](/images/stars.png)
<!-- Remote image on another server -->
<!-- Use the full URL of the image -->
![Astro](https://example.com/images/remote-image.png)

The <img> tag is not supported for local images, and the <Image /> component is unavailable in .md files.

If you require more control over your image attributes, we recommend using the .mdx file format, which allows you to include Astro’s <Image /> component or a JSX <img /> tag in addition to the Markdown syntax. Use the MDX integration to add support for MDX to Astro.

You can use Astro’s <Image /> component and JSX <img /> tags in your .mdx files by importing both the component and your image. Use them just as they are used in .astro files.

Additionally, there is support for standard Markdown ![alt](src) syntax with no import required.

src/pages/post-1.mdx
---
title: My Page title
---
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import rocket from '../assets/rocket.png';
# My MDX Page
// Local image stored in the src/pages/
![Houston in wild](houston.png)
// Local image stored in src/assets/
<Image src={rocket} alt="A rocketship in space." />
<img src={rocket.src} alt="A rocketship in space." />
![A rocketship in space](../assets/rocket.png)
// Image stored in public/images/
<Image src="/images/stars.png" alt="A starry night sky." />
<img src="/images/stars.png" alt="A starry night sky." />
![A starry night sky.](/images/stars.png)
// Remote image on another server
<Image src="https://example.com/images/remote-image.png" />
<img src="https://example.com/images/remote-image.png" />
![Astro](https://example.com/images/remote-image.png)

Images in content collections will be processed the same way they are in Markdown and MDX depending on which file type you are using.

Additionally, you can declare an associated image for a content collections entry, such as a blog post’s cover image, in your frontmatter using its path relative to the current folder:

src/content/blog/my-post.md
---
title: "My first blog post"
cover: "./firstpostcover.jpeg" # will resolve to "src/content/blog/firstblogcover.jpeg"
coverAlt: "A photograph of a sunset behind a mountain range."
---
This is a blog post

The image helper for the content collections schema lets you validate the image metadata using Zod.

src/content/config.ts
import { defineCollection, z } from "astro:content";
const blogCollection = defineCollection({
schema: ({ image }) => z.object({
title: z.string(),
cover: image().refine((img) => img.width >= 1080, {
message: "Cover image must be at least 1080 pixels wide!",
}),
coverAlt: z.string(),
}),
});
export const collections = {
blog: blogCollection,
};

The image will be imported and transformed into metadata, allowing you to pass it as a src to <Image/>, <img>, or getImage().

The example below shows a blog index page that renders the cover photo and title of each blog post from the schema above:

src/pages/blog.astro
---
import { Image } from "astro:assets";
import { getCollection } from "astro:content";
const allBlogPosts = await getCollection("blog");
---
{
allBlogPosts.map((post) => (
<div>
<Image src={post.data.cover} alt={post.data.coverAlt} />
<h2>
<a href={"/blog/" + post.slug}>{post.data.title}</a>
</h2>
</div>
))
}

Images in UI framework components

Section titled Images in UI framework components

When adding images in a UI framework component, use the framework’s own image syntax to render an image (e.g. <img /> in JSX, <img> in Svelte).

Local images must first be imported to access their image properties such as src.

src/components/ReactImage.jsx
import stars from "../assets/stars.png";
export default function ReactImage() {
return (
<img src={stars.src} alt="A starry night sky." />
)
}
src/components/SvelteImage.svelte
<script>
import stars from '../assets/stars.png';
</script>
<img src={stars.src} alt="A starry night sky." />

The <Image /> component, like any other Astro component, is unavailable to UI framework components.

But, you can pass the static content generated by <Image /> to a framework component inside a .astro file as children or using a named <slot/>:

src/components/ImageWrapper.astro
---
import ReactComponent from './ReactComponent.jsx';
import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
import stars from '~/stars/docline.png';
---
<ReactComponent>
<Image src={stars} alt="A starry night sky." />
</ReactComponent>

Generating images with getImage()

Section titled Generating images with getImage()

The getImage() function is intended for generating images destined to be used somewhere else than directly in HTML, for example in an API Route. It also allows you to create your own custom <Image /> component.

getImage() takes an options object with the same properties as the Image component (except alt).

---
import { getImage } from "astro:assets";
import myBackground from "../background.png";
const optimizedBackground = await getImage({src: myBackground, format: 'webp'});
---
<div style={`background-image: url(${optimizedBackground.src});`}></div>

It returns an object with the following properties:

{
rawOptions: {...}, // Original parameters passed
options: {...}, // Validated parameters passed
src: "...", // Path to the generated image
srcSet: {
values: [...], // Generated values for srcset, every entry has a url and a size descriptor
attribute: "", // Generated srcset attribute from the values
}
attributes: {...} // Additional HTML attributes needed to render the image (width, height, style, etc..)
}

Not all users can see images in the same way, so accessibility is an especially important concern when using images. Use the alt attribute to provide descriptive alt text for images.

This attribute is required for both the <Image /> and <Picture /> components. If no alt text is provided, a helpful error message will be provided reminding you to include the alt attribute.

If the image is merely decorative (i.e. doesn’t contribute to the understanding of the page), set alt="" so that screen readers know to ignore the image.

Sharp is the default image service used for astro:assets. You can further configure the image service using the image.service option.

If you would prefer to use Squoosh to transform your images, update your config with the following:

astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig, squooshImageService } from 'astro/config';
export default defineConfig({
image: {
service: squooshImageService(),
},
});

Configure no-op passthrough service

Section titled Configure no-op passthrough service

If your adapter for server or hybrid mode does not support Astro’s built-in Squoosh and Sharp image optimization (e.g. Deno, Cloudflare), you can configure a no-op image service to allow you to use the <Image /> and <Picture /> components. Note that Astro does not perform any image transformation and processing in these environments. However, you can still enjoy the other benefits of using astro:assets, including no Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS), the enforced alt attribute, and a consistent authoring experience.

Configure the passthroughImageService() to avoid both Squoosh and Sharp image processing:

astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig, passthroughImageService } from 'astro/config';
export default defineConfig({
image: {
service: passthroughImageService()
}
});

There are several third-party community image integrations for optimizing and working with images in your Astro project.

astro:assets is no longer behind an experimental flag in Astro v3.0.

<Image /> is now a built-in component and the previous @astrojs/image integration has been removed.

These and other accompanying changes to using images in Astro may cause some breaking changes when you upgrade your Astro project from an earlier version.

Please follow the instructions below as appropriate to upgrade an Astro v2.x project to v3.0.

Upgrade from experimental.assets

Section titled Upgrade from experimental.assets

If you had previously enabled the experimental flag for astro:assets, you will need to update your project for Astro v3.0 which now includes assets features by default.

Remove experimental.assets flag

Section titled Remove experimental.assets flag

Remove the experimental flag:

astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
export default defineConfig({
experimental: {
assets: true
}
});

If necessary, also update your src/env.d.ts file to replace the astro/client-image reference with astro/client:

src/env.d.ts
/// <reference types="astro/client-image" />
/// <reference types="astro/client" />

Remove the ~/assets import alias

Section titled Remove the ~/assets import alias

This import alias is no longer included by default with astro:assets. If you were using this alias with experimental assets, you must convert them to relative file paths, or create your own import aliases.

src/pages/posts/post-1.astro
---
import rocket from '~/assets/rocket.png';
import rocket from '../../assets/rocket.png';
---

Add simple asset support for Cloudflare, Deno, Vercel Edge and Netlify Edge

Section titled Add simple asset support for Cloudflare, Deno, Vercel Edge and Netlify Edge

Astro v3.0 allows astro:assets to work without errors in Cloudflare, Deno, Vercel Edge and Netlify Edge, which do not support Astro’s built-in Squoosh and Sharp image optimization. Note that Astro does not perform any image transformation and processing in these environments. However, you can still enjoy the other benefits of using astro:assets, including no Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS), the enforced alt attribute, and a consistent authoring experience.

If you previously avoided using astro:assets because of these constraints, you can now use them without issues. You can configure the no-op image service to explicitly opt-in to this behavior:

astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
export default defineConfig({
image: {
service: {
entrypoint: 'astro/assets/services/noop'
}
}
});

Decide where to store your images

Section titled Decide where to store your images

See the Images guide to help you decide where to store your images. You may wish to take advantage of new options for storing your images with the added flexibility astro:assets brings. For example, relative images from your project src/ can now be referenced in Markdown, MDX, and Markdoc using standard Markdown ![alt](src) syntax.

Previously, importing an image would return a simple string with the path of the image. Now, imported image assets match the following signature:

interface ImageMetadata {
src: string;
width: number;
height: number;
format: string;
}

You must update the src attribute of any existing <img> tags (including any images in UI framework components) and you may also update other attributes that are now available to you from the imported image.

src/components/MyComponent.astro
---
import rocket from '../images/rocket.svg';
---
<img src={rocket} width="250" height="250" alt="A rocketship in space." />
<img src={rocket.src} width={rocket.width} height={rocket.height} alt="A rocketship in space." />

Update your Markdown, MDX, and Markdoc files

Section titled Update your Markdown, MDX, and Markdoc files

Relative images from your project src/ can now be referenced in Markdown, MDX, and Markdoc using standard Markdown ![alt](src) syntax.

This allows you to move your images from the public/ directory to your project src/ where they will now be processed and optimized. Your existing images in public/ and remote images are still valid but are not optimized by Astro’s build process.

src/pages/posts/post-1.md
# My Markdown Page
<!-- Local images now possible! -->
![A starry night sky.](../../images/stars.png)
<!-- Keep your images next to your content! -->
![A starry night sky.](./stars.png)

If you require more control over your image attributes, we recommend using the .mdx file format, which allows you to include Astro’s <Image /> component or a JSX <img /> tag in addition to the Markdown syntax. Use the MDX integration to add support for MDX to Astro.

If you were using the image integration in Astro v2.x, complete the following steps:

  1. Remove the @astrojs/image integration.

    You must remove the integration by uninstalling and then removing it from your astro.config.mjs file.

    astro.config.mjs
    import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
    import image from '@astrojs/image';
    export default defineConfig({
    integrations: [
    image(),
    ]
    })
  2. Update types (if required).

    If you had special types configured for @astrojs/image in src/env.d.ts, you may need to change them back to the default Astro types if your upgrade to v3 did not complete this step for you.

    src/env.d.ts
    /// <reference types="@astrojs/image/client" />
    /// <reference types="astro/client" />

    Similarly, update tsconfig.json if necessary:

    tsconfig.json
    {
    "compilerOptions": {
    "types": ["@astrojs/image/client"]
    "types": ["astro/client"]
    }
    }
  3. Migrate any existing <Image /> components.

    Change all import statements from @astrojs/image/components to astro:assets in order to use the new built-in <Image /> component.

    Remove any component attributes that are not currently supported image asset properties.

    For example, aspectRatio is no longer supported, as it is now automatically inferred from the width and height attributes.

    src/components/MyComponent.astro
    ---
    import { Image } from '@astrojs/image/components';
    import { Image } from 'astro:assets';
    import localImage from '../assets/logo.png';
    const localAlt = 'The Astro Logo';
    ---
    <Image
    src={localImage}
    width={300}
    aspectRatio="16:9"
    alt={localAlt}
    />
  4. Choose a default image service.

    Sharp is now the default image service used for astro:assets. If you would like to use Sharp, no configuration is required.

    If you would prefer to use Squoosh to transform your images, update your config with the following image.service option:

    astro.config.mjs
    import { defineConfig, squooshImageService } from 'astro/config';
    export default defineConfig({
    image: {
    service: squooshImageService(),
    },
    });

Update Content Collections schemas

Section titled Update Content Collections schemas

You can now declare an associated image for a content collections entry, such as a blog post’s cover image, in your frontmatter using its path relative to the current folder.

The new image helper for content collections lets you validate the image metadata using Zod. Learn more about how to use images in content collections

Section titled Navigating Image Imports in Astro v3.0

In Astro v3.0, if you have to preserve the old import behavior for images and require a string representation of the image’s URL, append ?url to the end of your image path when importing it. For example:

src/pages/blog/MyImages.astro
---
import Sprite from '../assets/logo.svg?url';
---
<svg>
<use xlink:href={Sprite + '#cart'} />
</svg>

This approach ensures you obtain the URL string. Keep in mind that during development, Astro uses a src/ path, but upon building, it generates hashed paths like /_astro/cat.a6737dd3.png.

If you prefer to work directly with the image object itself, you can access the .src property. This approach is best for tasks like managing image dimensions for Core Web Vitals metrics and preventing CLS.

If you are transitioning into the new import behavior, combining ?url and .src methods might be the right method for seamless image handling.