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Best React Native Newsletters and Update Sources

· 5 min read
Full Stack Developer
Last updated on May 6, 2026

best react native newsletters

React Native changes quickly, but subscribing to every feed is not a strategy. A good learning system should separate official release information, curated weekly summaries, deep technical posts, and product-focused app development guidance.

This list focuses on resources that help React Native developers stay current without turning every week into research work.

Quick Answer

If you only subscribe to a few React Native update sources, start with:

If you are learning React Native through an Instamobile product, keep Getting Started with React Native and the app-specific docs next to these update feeds.

How To Use Newsletters Without Wasting Time

Use newsletters as a filter, not as a task list.

Recommended workflow:

  1. Pick one React Native-specific source.
  2. Pick one broader React source.
  3. Read official release notes before upgrading packages.
  4. Save interesting libraries to a backlog instead of installing them immediately.
  5. Review saved links only when they solve a real product problem.

This keeps your app stable and helps you avoid dependency churn.

1. React Native Blog

The React Native Blog should be your source of truth for official announcements, architecture changes, version releases, and ecosystem direction.

Read it when:

  • You plan a React Native upgrade.
  • You see a major architecture change mentioned elsewhere.
  • You need to understand what the core team recommends.

2. Expo React Native Blog

The Expo React Native category is useful even when your app is not fully Expo-managed. Expo publishes practical posts about EAS, OTA updates, native modules, development workflows, and app operations.

Read it when:

  • You use Expo packages in a React Native app.
  • You maintain development builds.
  • You care about release automation, OTA updates, and mobile QA.

3. The React Native Newsletter

The React Native Newsletter is a React Native-specific newsletter from the Infinite Red community. It focuses on React Native news, articles, libraries, apps, and community updates.

Use it for:

  • New libraries worth reviewing.
  • Community articles.
  • Real app examples.
  • Ecosystem announcements that may not deserve a full release-note read yet.

4. This Week In React

This Week In React covers React, React Native, Expo, TypeScript, tooling, and adjacent ecosystem news. It is useful because React Native work is rarely isolated from React and JavaScript changes.

Use it for:

  • React updates that may eventually affect React Native.
  • React Native and Expo weekly summaries.
  • Tooling trends worth tracking.
  • Signals from maintainers and library authors.

5. React Status

React Status is a weekly Cooperpress roundup covering React and React Native links and tutorials. It is compact and useful when you want a quick scan rather than a deep newsletter.

Use it for:

  • Tutorials.
  • Library releases.
  • Community links.
  • A broader frontend perspective.

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What About Podcasts, YouTube, and Social Feeds?

Newsletters are best for scanning. Podcasts and videos are better for context.

Good companions:

Use long-form content when you want to understand why a technology changed, not just what changed.

Best Internal Reads After You Subscribe

FAQ

Should beginners follow daily React Native news?

No. Beginners should spend most of their time building. Check a newsletter once a week, but prioritize learning components, navigation, state, data fetching, debugging, and release builds.

Should I upgrade every time I see a package release?

No. Upgrade intentionally. Read release notes, test on both platforms, and prefer upgrades that fix bugs, improve security, or unblock a product need.

Are newsletters enough for production apps?

No. For production apps, newsletters are only discovery. Decisions should still be based on official docs, changelogs, migration guides, and local testing.

Bottom Line

The best React Native learning system is simple: build every week, read official docs when you upgrade, and use a small set of newsletters to discover what deserves deeper attention.

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