--- title: Host on Netlify description: Host your site on Netlify. categories: [] keywords: [] aliases: [/hosting-and-deployment/hosting-on-netlify/] --- Use these instructions to enable continuous deployment from a GitHub repository. The same general steps apply if you are using Azure DevOps, Bitbucket, or GitLab for version control. ## Prerequisites Please complete the following tasks before continuing: 1. [Create](https://app.netlify.com/signup) a Netlify account 1. [Log in](https://app.netlify.com/login) to your Netlify account 1. [Create](https://github.com/signup) a GitHub account 1. [Log in](https://github.com/login) to your GitHub account 1. [Create](https://github.com/new) a GitHub repository for your project 1. [Create](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-init) a local Git repository for your project with a [remote](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-remote) reference to your GitHub repository 1. Create a Hugo site within your local Git repository and test it with the `hugo server` command 1. Commit the changes to your local Git repository and push to your GitHub repository. ## Procedure Step 1 : Log in to your Netlify account, navigate to the Sites page, press the **Add new site** button, and choose "Import an existing project" from the dropdown menu. Step 2 : Select your deployment method. ![screen capture](netlify-step-02.png) Step 3 : Authorize Netlify to connect with your GitHub account by pressing the **Authorize Netlify** button. ![screen capture](netlify-step-03.png) Step 4 : Press the **Configure Netlify on GitHub** button. ![screen capture](netlify-step-04.png) Step 5 : Install the Netlify app by selecting your GitHub account. ![screen capture](netlify-step-05.png) Step 6 : Press the **Install** button. ![screen capture](netlify-step-06.png) Step 7 : Click on the site's repository from the list. ![screen capture](netlify-step-07.png) Step 8 : Set the site name and branch from which to deploy. ![screen capture](netlify-step-08.png) Step 9 : Define the build settings, press the **Add environment variables** button, then press the **New variable** button. ![screen capture](netlify-step-09.png) Step 10 : Create a new environment variable named `HUGO_VERSION` and set the value to the [latest version](https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/releases/latest). ![screen capture](netlify-step-10.png) Step 11 : Press the "Deploy my new site" button at the bottom of the page. ![screen capture](netlify-step-11.png) Step 12 : At the bottom of the screen, wait for the deploy to complete, then click on the deploy log entry. ![screen capture](netlify-step-12.png) Step 13 : Press the **Open production deploy** button to view the live site. ![screen capture](netlify-step-13.png) ## Configuration file In the procedure above we configured our site using the Netlify user interface. Most site owners find it easier to use a configuration file checked into source control. Create a new file named `netlify.toml` in the root of your project directory. In its simplest form, the configuration file might look like this: ```toml {file="netlify.toml"} [build.environment] GO_VERSION = "1.24.5" HUGO_VERSION = "0.148.2" NODE_VERSION = "22.18.0" TZ = "Europe/Oslo" [build] publish = "public" command = """\ git config core.quotepath false && \ hugo --gc --minify --baseURL "${URL}" """ ``` If your site requires Dart Sass to transpile Sass to CSS, the configuration file should look something like this: ```toml {file="netlify.toml"} [build.environment] DART_SASS_VERSION = "1.90.0" GO_VERSION = "1.24.5" HUGO_VERSION = "0.148.2" NODE_VERSION = "22.18.0" TZ = "Europe/Oslo" [build] publish = "public" command = """\ curl -sLJO "https://github.com/sass/dart-sass/releases/download/${DART_SASS_VERSION}/dart-sass-${DART_SASS_VERSION}-linux-x64.tar.gz" && \ tar -C "${HOME}/.local" -xf "dart-sass-${DART_SASS_VERSION}-linux-x64.tar.gz" && \ rm "dart-sass-${DART_SASS_VERSION}-linux-x64.tar.gz" && \ export PATH="${HOME}/.local/dart-sass:${PATH}" && \ git config core.quotepath false && \ hugo --gc --minify --baseURL "${URL}" """ ```