diff --git a/src/content/learn/react-compiler.md b/src/content/learn/react-compiler.md
index f34c382e..2920e864 100644
--- a/src/content/learn/react-compiler.md
+++ b/src/content/learn/react-compiler.md
@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ In addition to these docs, we recommend checking the [React Compiler Working Gro
Prior to installing the compiler, you can first check to see if your codebase is compatible:
-npx react-compiler-healthcheck@latest
+npx react-compiler-healthcheck@experimental
This script will:
@@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ Found no usage of incompatible libraries.
React Compiler also powers an eslint plugin. The eslint plugin can be used **independently** of the compiler, meaning you can use the eslint plugin even if you don't use the compiler.
-npm install eslint-plugin-react-compiler
+npm install eslint-plugin-react-compiler@experimental
Then, add it to your eslint config:
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ If you're starting a new project, you can enable the compiler on your entire cod
### Babel {/*usage-with-babel*/}
-npm install babel-plugin-react-compiler
+npm install babel-plugin-react-compiler@experimental
The compiler includes a Babel plugin which you can use in your build pipeline to run the compiler.
@@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ Next.js has an experimental configuration to enable the React Compiler. It autom
- Install `babel-plugin-react-compiler`
-npm install next@canary babel-plugin-react-compiler
+npm install next@canary babel-plugin-react-compiler@experimental
Then configure the experimental option in `next.config.js`: