Skip to content

Release Notes

Versioning Scheme

Laravel and its other first-party packages follow Semantic Versioning. Major framework releases are released every year (~Q1), while minor and patch releases may be released as often as every week. Minor and patch releases should never contain breaking changes.

When referencing the Laravel framework or its components from your application or package, you should always use a version constraint such as ^11.0, since major releases of Laravel do include breaking changes. However, we strive to always ensure you may update to a new major release in one day or less.

Named Arguments

Named arguments are not covered by Laravel's backwards compatibility guidelines. We may choose to rename function arguments when necessary in order to improve the Laravel codebase. Therefore, using named arguments when calling Laravel methods should be done cautiously and with the understanding that the parameter names may change in the future.

Support Policy

For all Laravel releases, bug fixes are provided for 18 months and security fixes are provided for 2 years. For all additional libraries, including Lumen, only the latest major release receives bug fixes. In addition, please review the database versions supported by Laravel.

Version PHP (*) Release Bug Fixes Until Security Fixes Until
9 8.0 - 8.2 February 8th, 2022 August 8th, 2023 February 6th, 2024
10 8.1 - 8.3 February 14th, 2023 August 6th, 2024 February 4th, 2025
11 8.2 - 8.4 March 12th, 2024 September 3rd, 2025 March 12th, 2026
12 8.2 - 8.4 February 24th, 2025 August 13th, 2026 February 24th, 2027
End of life
Security fixes only

(*) Supported PHP versions

Laravel 12

Laravel 12 continues the improvements made in Laravel 11.x by updating upstream dependencies and introducing new starter kits for React, Vue, and Livewire, including the option of using WorkOS AuthKit for user authentication. The WorkOS variant of our starter kits offers social authentication, passkeys, and SSO support.

Minimal Breaking Changes

Much of our focus during this release cycle has been minimizing breaking changes. Instead, we have dedicated ourselves to shipping continuous quality-of-life improvements throughout the year that do not break existing applications.

Therefore, the Laravel 12 release is a relatively minor "maintenance release" in order to upgrade existing dependencies. In light of this, most Laravel applications may upgrade to Laravel 12 without changing any application code.

New Application Starter Kits

Laravel 12 introduces new application starter kits for React, Vue, and Livewire. The React and Vue starter kits utilize Inertia 2, TypeScript, shadcn/ui, and Tailwind, while the Livewire starter kits utilize the Tailwind-based Flux UI component library and Laravel Volt.

The React, Vue, and Livewire starter kits all utilize Laravel's built-in authentication system to offer login, registration, password reset, email verification, and more. In addition, we are introducing a WorkOS AuthKit-powered variant of each starter kit, offering social authentication, passkeys, and SSO support. WorkOS offers free authentication for applications up to 1 million monthly active users.

With the introduction of our new application starter kits, Laravel Breeze and Laravel Jetstream will no longer receive additional updates.

To get started with our new starter kits, check out the starter kit documentation.

Laravel is the most productive way to
build, deploy, and monitor software.