Build Compose UIs faster and let your creativity flow when designing multiplatform user interfaces.
With Compose Hot Reload, you can make UI code changes in a Compose Multiplatform app and see the results instantly,
without needing to restart.
The JetBrains Runtime intelligently reloads your code whenever it changes.
[!IMPORTANT]
Compose Hot Reload needs a JVM target in your multiplatform project. We're exploring adding support for
other targets in the future.
Prerequisites
Ensure that your project meets the minimum version requirements:
Kotlin 2.1.20 or higher.
Compose compiler 2.1.20 or higher.
Compose Multiplatform 1.8.2 or higher.
JetBrains Runtime:
To be compatible with JetBrains Runtime, your project must
target
Java 21 or earlier.
For the best development experience, we recommend using an IDE with the Kotlin Multiplatform plugin:
IntelliJ IDEA 2025.2.2 or higher, or Android Studio Otter 2025.2.1 or higher.
Follow the Kotlin Multiplatform quickstart
guide to set up your environment and create a project. Be sure to select the desktop target when you create the project.
Apply the Gradle plugin to your project
In your project, update the version catalog. In gradle/libs.versions.toml, add the following code:
composeHotReload = { id = "org.jetbrains.compose.hot-reload", version.ref = "composeHotReload"}
In the build.gradle.kts of your parent project, add the following code to your plugins {} block:
This prevents the Compose Hot Reload plugin from being loaded multiple times in each of your subprojects.
In the build.gradle.kts of the subproject containing your multiplatform application, add the following code to your
plugins {} block:
plugins {
alias(libs.plugins.composeHotReload)
}
An installation of the JetBrains Runtime is required:
Launching Compose Hot Reload with the Kotlin Multiplatform IDE plugin will re-use IntelliJ's installation of the
JetBrains Runtime.
If you want Gradle to automatically download the JetBrains Runtime, add the following code to your
settings.gradle.kts file
plugins {
id("org.gradle.toolchains.foojay-resolver-convention") version "1.0.0"
}
Alternatively, you can use automatic JetBrains Runtime provisioning for the hot reload tasks by enabling
the compose.reload.jbr.autoProvisioningEnabled property.
[!IMPORTANT]
Automatic JetBrains Runtime provisioning is an experimental feature. Please report any issues you encounter.
Click the Sync Gradle Changes button to synchronize Gradle files:
Use Compose Hot Reload
You can run your application with Compose Hot Reload using your IDE or the CLI via Gradle tasks.
Compose Hot Reload supports two modes: Explicit mode and Auto mode.
In Explicit mode, you manually trigger the reload to apply changes.
In Auto mode, Compose Hot Reload uses Gradle’s file-watching and continuous build system
to automatically reload when file changes are detected.
To enable this mode, specify the --autoReload or --auto arguments in CLI
or in the run configuration settings.
In the IDE
In IntelliJ IDEA or Android Studio, you can run Compose Hot Reload directly from the IDE gutter.
Click the Run icon
in the gutter of your main function and select Run 'shared [jvm]' with Compose Hot Reload.
When you save code changes, the reload is triggered automatically.
Alternatively, you can trigger the reload explicitly by pressing the assigned shortcut key or
clicking the Reload UI button:
You can modify the trigger behavior on the Settings | Tools | Compose Hot Reload page in your IDE.
[!IMPORTANT]
If you don't have the Kotlin Multiplatform IDE plugin
installed, you can manually create Gradle run configurations with hot reload tasks (see Run tasks).
In this case, you can trigger the reload by clicking the Reload UI button or running the reload Gradle task.
From the CLI
Run tasks
The Compose Hot Reload plugin automatically creates the following tasks to launch the application:
:hotRunJvm: For multiplatform projects. The async alternative is :hotRunJvmAsync.
:hotRun: For Kotlin/JVM projects. The async alternative is :hotRunAsync.
You can run these Gradle tasks from the command line:
./gradlew :app:hotRunJvm
# or
./gradlew :composeApp:hotRunJvm
After making changes, save all files to automatically update your app's UI.
Custom target name
If you define a custom JVM target name, Gradle uses a different task name. For example, if your target name is
desktop:
kotlin {
jvm("desktop")
}
The task name is :hotRunDesktop.
Command-line arguments
Here's a list of all the possible arguments that you can use with the Gradle run tasks:
[!WARNING]
You can't run reload tasks with the --autoReload or --auto command-line argument.
The Compose Hot Reload plugin also provides Gradle tasks to recompile and reload your application:
reload: Reload all, currently running, applications.
hotReloadJvmMain: Reload all applications that use the jvmMain source set.
For example:
./gradlew :app:reload
Use developer builds
If you want to try the latest changes in Compose Hot Reload, you can use dev builds. To use the latest 'dev' builds of
Compose Hot Reload, add the firework Maven repository in your settings.gradle.kts file:
We found that org.jetbrains.compose.hot-reload:hot-reload-runtime-api-iossimulatorarm64 demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago.It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Package last updated on 09 Apr 2026
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