What Are Preconnect Resource Hints?

In this article, let’s take a look at preconnect resource hints — what they are, why and how to use them, and best practices for auditing and scaling them.

What is a preconnect?

A preconnect is a resource hint that tells the browser to make a proactive HTTP connection to a domain the browser has not yet determined needs to be made. Creating an HTTP connection takes many steps, including:

  1. Making a DNS lookup.
  2. Connecting a TCP.
  3. Negotiating a secure TLS connection.

This can take tens or even hundreds of milliseconds. Preconnecting improves performance because when the browser does realize it needs to make a connection to download a resource, that connection has already happened!

Examples and real-life case studies

Let’s see an example. The screenshot below shows a request for a CSS file from Google:

This resource is discovered later in the waterfall and an existing HTTP connection does not exist. The browser knows it needs to download this CSS file, but first it must complete a DNS lookup, then create a TCP connection, and finally negotiate an encrypted TLS connection. These add roughly 100 ms of delay that occurs before the CSS file can be requested. We can optimize this by adding a preconnect resource hint in the <head> of the HTML file, as shown below:

<link rel="preconnect" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/">

We can see the results in the waterfall screenshot below. The preconnect hint instructs the browser to proactively connect to the Google Fonts domain. When the browser later discovers the CSS file that it needs to request, a connection has already been established. This allowed the CSS file to download immediately, shifting the overall waterfall to the left:

That was great for an example, but what are some real-world examples of the benefits of preconnect?

At Splunk, we have firsthand experience. In early 2020, we worked with a major media customer which had a substantial amount of JavaScript for a variety of third-party domains. By analyzing their site and implementing resource hints such, as preconnect and preload, we improved Time-to-Interactive by 37%, from a median of 12.8 seconds down to 7.9 seconds.

Resource hints in general — and preconnects in particular — are something that all websites should consider.

How to use preconnect to improve performance

Given the impressive gains described above, I know what you must be thinking:

If preconnect resource hints improve overall performance and user experience, why don’t I preconnect to all the domains used by my website?

Unfortunately, this can hurt performance. Why? It’s simple: browsers use a lot of complex logic to decide what needs to be downloaded and when, so the page can render and be responsive for the visitor as quickly as possible. (If you want all the nerdy details, Pat Meenan has exhaustively documented and presented on it.)

A site using resource hints is essentially asking to override what operations the browser would normally perform. This can be the source of different performance issues if used carelessly.

Excessive preconnect hints

Browsers place limits on the number of HTTP connections they will maintain. Using an excessive number of preconnect resource hints will limit the browser from making connections it needs. In effect, too many preconnects can hurt performance.

A good rule of thumb is to have no more than 6-8 preconnect resource hints.

Preconnecting to an unused domain

The only thing worse than making too many preconnects, is to ask the browser to preconnect to a domain that isn’t even used! However this can be surprisingly common. Sites change where their content comes from, or they stop using a third-party provider without removing a preconnect resource hint for that domain. Preconnects to unused domains cause performance issues in two ways:

Prematurely closed preconnect

Because browsers limit the number of HTTP connects they will maintain, browsers will close an HTTP connection if no requests happen within 10 seconds. A Premature Preconnect happens when a preconnect hint tells the browser to open an HTTP connection to a domain, but no requests are sent to that domain for 10 seconds. The browser then closes this connection, only to have to make it again when it needs to request a resource from that domain. This is bad for two reasons:

Safari’s rel resource hint issue

Many sites have adopted the pattern of specifying both a preconnect hint as well as a dns-prefetch hint inside the same <link> tag, as shown below. (See our guide to DNS prefetches resource hints for a detailed discussion.)

<link rel="preconnect dns-prefetch" href="https://example.com/">

This practice started because browsers varied in which types of resource hints they supported. As of 2020, more browsers support preconnect than support DNS prefetch and all major browsers that support DNS prefetch also support preconnect.

There really is little benefit of specifying two different resource hints inside the same <link> tag, and in reality, there is a big negative in doing this. Safari only allows one resource hint to be specified in the rel attribute of a <link> tag. Specifying two hints inside the same rel attribute causes Safari to skip the <link> tag entirely and it will not attempt either resource hint.

In effect, specifying multiple resource hints disables the hint for Safari! Instead, you should just use <link rel="preconnect"> hints.

When to use preconnect hints

In general, preconnect hints should be made to:

Good examples of these include:

Once you have determined which domains should be preconnected, you still need to test it! Just because something should improve your site’s performance or experience, doesn’t mean it will. Make sure to always test to verify:

  1. Baseline your performance with synthetic tools.
  2. Implement your change.
  3. Compare the “before” and “after” performance metrics.

Best practices for preconnect resource hints

We have seen there are many benefits from using preconnect resource hints, but also many pitfalls that hurt performance if used incorrectly. This means it is important to audit how a page is using resource hints to ensure you are following all the best practices.

Automate with Splunk

This can all be overwhelming, we know! If you are looking for a more automated solution or want to do this validation at scale, you have options. Splunk Synthetic Monitoring automatically audits pages for different issues that can occur when using resource hints.

Related Articles

SOLID Design Principles: Hands-On Examples
Learn
7 Minute Read

SOLID Design Principles: Hands-On Examples

Learn SOLID design principles with hands-on examples. Discover how to write flexible, maintainable code and avoid common pitfalls as your projects grow.
Knowledge Graphs: What They Are and Why They Matter
Learn
7 Minute Read

Knowledge Graphs: What They Are and Why They Matter

Knowledge graphs can make organizing and understanding information much easier. Learn how they work and what benefits they provide in this comprehensive guide.
Artificial Intelligence as a Service (AIaaS): What is Cloud AI & How Does it Work?
Learn
5 Minute Read

Artificial Intelligence as a Service (AIaaS): What is Cloud AI & How Does it Work?

Learn what Artificial Intelligence as a Service (AIaaS) and cloud AI are, including their key benefits, challenges, technology layers, and core features.
Understanding Application Lifecycle Management (ALM): Stages, Strategies, and Benefits
Learn
7 Minute Read

Understanding Application Lifecycle Management (ALM): Stages, Strategies, and Benefits

Comprehensive guide to Application Lifecycle Management (ALM): key stages, best practices, and benefits for managing software from planning to retirement.
Top AI Trends for 2026: Key Technologies and Challenges and What They Mean
Learn
5 Minute Read

Top AI Trends for 2026: Key Technologies and Challenges and What They Mean

Discover the top AI trends for 2026 — and learn how businesses can leverage these advancements, overcome new challenges, and stay ahead in a rapidly evolving landscape.
Hashing in Cryptography Explained: How It Works, Algorithms, and Real-World Uses
Learn
8 Minute Read

Hashing in Cryptography Explained: How It Works, Algorithms, and Real-World Uses

Learn what hashing in cryptography is, how it works, key algorithms like SHA-256, real-world uses, and best practices to keep your data secure.
Understanding Network Traffic & Network Congestion: Metrics, Measurement, and Optimization
Learn
8 Minute Read

Understanding Network Traffic & Network Congestion: Metrics, Measurement, and Optimization

Network traffic is critical for businesses today. Read on to learn how network traffic works, and how to stop traffic congestion.
How To Monitor Data Storage Systems: Metrics, Tools, & Best Practices
Learn
9 Minute Read

How To Monitor Data Storage Systems: Metrics, Tools, & Best Practices

Learn how to monitor data storage systems. Discover key metrics, tools, and strategies to prevent outages, reduce costs, and maintain reliable performance.
Data Enrichment Strategies: How to Enhance Your Business Data for Better Insights
Learn
5 Minute Read

Data Enrichment Strategies: How to Enhance Your Business Data for Better Insights

Unlock business growth with data enrichment. Discover key strategies, tools, and best practices to enhance data quality, drive insights, and improve decision-making.