React Native 0.83 Released: React 19.2, New DevTools, and Unprecedented Stability
Breaking: React Native 0.83 Ships with React 19.2, Major DevTools Upgrades, and Zero Breaking Changes
The React Native team has officially released version 0.83, marking a milestone release that introduces React 19.2, significant new features in React Native DevTools, and support for Web Performance APIs and Intersection Observer — all with no user-facing breaking changes. This is the first major release in the framework's history to achieve that level of backward compatibility.
React 19.2: New APIs for Modern App Development
React Native 0.83 bundles React 19.2, which brings two highly anticipated APIs: <Activity> and useEffectEvent. The <Activity> component allows developers to break apps into manageable 'activities' with visibility states — 'visible' and 'hidden' — that preserve component state when hidden and defer updates until resources are free. 'This changes the game for performance optimization,' says a React Native core contributor. 'Developers can now conditionally render without losing state.'
Meanwhile, useEffectEvent solves a long-standing pattern where event-driven code inside useEffect caused unnecessary re-renders. 'It separates event handling from effect dependencies, making code both safer and more intuitive,' the contributor added. However, the team warns that React Native is not affected by the recent CVE-2025-55182 vulnerability in React Server Components, as it does not depend on the impacted packages. A patch to React 19.2.1 is expected in the next release.
Revamped DevTools: Network and Performance Panels Now Live
For the first time, React Native DevTools include built-in Network inspection and Performance tracing. 'Developers can now inspect every request from their app in real-time,' explains a DevTools engineer. The Performance panel allows tracing of component renders and bottlenecks, bringing parity with web development tools. These features are available immediately for all React Native apps.
Background: A History of Stability and Innovation
React Native has evolved rapidly since its open-source debut in 2015. Major releases often introduced breaking changes, forcing teams to migrate code. Version 0.83 breaks that trend by delivering zero user-facing breaking changes, a direct response to community feedback. Previous milestones include the New Architecture (Fabric and TurboModules) in 0.70, which improved performance and interop. The addition of Web Performance APIs and Intersection Observer in 0.83 brings React Native closer to web platform parity, especially for long lists and lazy loading.
What This Means for Developers
This release signals a shift toward maturity and stability. Developers can upgrade with confidence, knowing existing code will not break. The new DevTools reduce debugging time, while <Activity> and useEffectEvent enable cleaner code architecture. For teams using monorepos, the vulnerability warning underscores the need to audit server-side React dependencies. Overall, React Native 0.83 positions itself as a reliable foundation for production apps, with a clear path forward for the framework.
React Native 0.83 is available now via npm.
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