django-minify-html
Use minify-html, the extremely fast HTML + JS + CSS minifier, with Django.
Work smarter and faster with my book Boost Your Django DX which covers many ways to improve your development experience.
Requirements
Python 3.10 to 3.14 supported.
Django 4.2 to 6.0 supported.
Installation
-
Install with pip:
sh python -m pip install django-minify-html -
Add django-minify-html to your
INSTALLED_APPS:python INSTALLED_APPS = [ ..., "django_minify_html", ..., ] -
Add the middleware:
python MIDDLEWARE = [ ..., "django_minify_html.middleware.MinifyHtmlMiddleware", ..., ]The middleware should be below any other middleware that may encode your responses, such as Django's
GZipMiddleware_. It should be above any that may modify your HTML, such as those of django-debug-toolbar or django-browser-reload.
Reference
For information about what minify-html does, refer to its documentation.
django_minify_html.middleware.MinifyHtmlMiddleware
The middleware runs minify_html.minify() on the content of HTML
responses. This function minifies HTML, and any inline JavaScript and
CSS.
The middleware passes keyword arguments to minify() from its
minify_args attribute, a dictionary of names to values. These
correspond to the values in the Rust library's Cfg
structure,
which have defaults in the Python library as visible in the
source.
By default the middleware overrides minify_css and minify_js to
True. If you need to change an argument, subclass the middleware,
replace minify_args, and use your subclass. For example, to preserve
comments after minification:
from django_minify_html.middleware import MinifyHtmlMiddleware
class ProjectMinifyHtmlMiddleware(MinifyHtmlMiddleware):
minify_args = MinifyHtmlMiddleware.minify_args | {
"keep_comments": True,
}
(This example uses the dictionary merge operator.)
The middleware applies to all non-streaming, non-encoded HTML responses.
You can skip it on individual views with the @no_html_minification
decorator, documented below.
To restrict it more broadly, you can use a subclass with an overridden
should_minify() method. This method accepts the request and
response, and returns a bool. For example, to avoid minification of
URL's with the URL prefix /admin/:
from django.http import HttpRequest, HttpResponse
from django_minify_html.middleware import MinifyHtmlMiddleware
class ProjectMinifyHtmlMiddleware(MinifyHtmlMiddleware):
def should_minify(self, request: HttpRequest, response: HttpResponse) -> bool:
return super().should_minify(request, response) and not request.path.startswith(
"/admin/"
)
Note that responses are minified even when DEBUG is True. This is
recommended because HTML minification can reveal bugs in your templates,
so it's best to always work with your HTML as it will appear in
production. Minified HTML is hard to read with "View Source" - it's best
to rely on the inspector in your browser's developer tools.
django_minify_html.decorators.no_html_minification
Apply this decorator to views for which you want to skip HTML minification.
from django.shortcuts import render
from django_minify_html.decorators import no_html_minification
@no_html_minification
def example_view(request):
return render(request, "problematic-template.html")
Motivation
HTML minification is an underappreciated technique for web optimization. It can yield significant savings, even on top of other tools like HTTP compression (try django-http-compression for that.)
There is an existing package for HTML minification in Django, django-htmlmin. But it is much slower, since it does the minification in Python. At time of writing, it is also unmaintained, with no release since March 2019.
There are other minifiers out there, but in benchmarks minify-html surpasses them all. It's a really well optimized and tested Rust library, and seems to be the best available HTML minifier.
Historically, Cloudflare provided automatic minification (removed August 2024). This was convenient at the CDN layer, since it requires no application changes. But it adds some overhead: non-minified HTML has to first be transferred to the CDN, and the CDN has to parse the response, and recombine it. It also means that you don't get to see the potential side effects of minification until your code is live. Overall it should be faster and more predictable to minify within Django, at the point of HTML generation.