The Stripe React Native SDK allows you to build delightful payment experiences in your native Android and iOS apps using React Native. We provide powerful and customizable UI screens and elements that can be used out-of-the-box to collect your users' payment details.
Get started with our π integration guides and example project, or π browse the SDK reference.
Updating to a newer version of the SDK? See our changelog.
Simplified Security: We make it simple for you to collect sensitive data such as credit card numbers and remain PCI compliant. This means the sensitive data is sent directly to Stripe instead of passing through your server. For more information, see our Integration Security Guide.
Apple Pay: We provide a seamless integration with Apple Pay.
Payment methods: Accepting more payment methods helps your business expand its global reach and improve checkout conversion.
SCA-Ready: The SDK automatically performs native 3D Secure authentication if needed to comply with Strong Customer Authentication regulation in Europe.
Native UI: We provide native screens and elements to securely collect payment details on Android and iOS.
PaymentSheet: Learn how to integrate PaymentSheet, our new pre-built payments UI for mobile apps. PaymentSheet lets you accept cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay, and much more out of the box and also supports saving & reusing payment methods. PaymentSheet currently accepts the following payment methods: Card, Apple Pay, Google Pay, SEPA Debit, Bancontact, iDEAL, and Sofort.
If you're selling digital products or services within your app, (e.g. subscriptions, in-game currencies, game levels, access to premium content, or unlocking a full version), you must use the app store's in-app purchase APIs. See Apple's and Google's guidelines for more information. For all other scenarios you can use this SDK to process payments via Stripe.
yarn add @stripe/stripe-react-native
or
npm install @stripe/stripe-react-native
Each Expo SDK version requires a specific stripe-react-native
version. See the CHANGELOG for a mapping of versions. To install the correct version for your Expo SDK version run:
expo install @stripe/stripe-react-native
Next, add:
{
"expo": {
...
"plugins": [
[
"@stripe/stripe-react-native",
{
"merchantIdentifier": string | string [],
"enableGooglePay": boolean
}
]
],
}
}
to your app.json
file, where merchantIdentifier
is the Apple merchant ID obtained here. Otherwise, Apple Pay will not work as expected. If you have multiple merchantIdentifier
s, you can set them in an array.
- Android 5.0 (API level 21) and above
- Android gradle plugin 4.x and above
Components
In order to use CardForm component, you need to install and configure Material Components theme in your app.
- Add below dependency to your
app/build.gradle
file with specified version
implementation 'com.google.android.material:material:<version>'
- Set appropriate style in your
styles.xml
file
<style name="Theme.MyApp" parent="Theme.MaterialComponents.DayNight">
<!-- ... -->
</style>
Compatible with apps targeting iOS 11 or above.
The SDK uses TypeScript features available in Babel version 7.9.0
and above.
Alternatively use the plugin-transform-typescript
plugin in your project.
You'll need to run pod install
in your ios
directory to install the native dependencies.
// App.ts
import { StripeProvider } from '@stripe/stripe-react-native';
function App() {
return (
<StripeProvider
publishableKey={publishableKey}
merchantIdentifier="merchant.identifier"
>
<PaymentScreen />
</StripeProvider>
);
}
// PaymentScreen.ts
import { CardField, useStripe } from '@stripe/stripe-react-native';
export default function PaymentScreen() {
const { confirmPayment } = useStripe();
return (
<CardField
postalCodeEnabled={true}
placeholder={{
number: '4242 4242 4242 4242',
}}
cardStyle={{
backgroundColor: '#FFFFFF',
textColor: '#000000',
}}
style={{
width: '100%',
height: 50,
marginVertical: 30,
}}
onCardChange={(cardDetails) => {
console.log('cardDetails', cardDetails);
}}
onFocus={(focusedField) => {
console.log('focusField', focusedField);
}}
/>
);
}
To initialize Stripe in your React Native app, use the StripeProvider
component in the root component of your application, or use the initStripe
method.
StripeProvider
can accept urlScheme
, publishableKey
, stripeAccountId
, threeDSecureParams
and merchantIdentifier
as props. Only publishableKey
is required.
import { StripeProvider } from '@stripe/stripe-react-native';
function App() {
const [publishableKey, setPublishableKey] = useState('');
const fetchPublishableKey = async () => {
const key = await fetchKey(); // fetch key from your server here
setPublishableKey(key);
};
useEffect(() => {
fetchPublishableKey();
}, []);
return (
<StripeProvider
publishableKey={publishableKey}
merchantIdentifier="merchant.identifier"
>
// Your app code here
</StripeProvider>
);
}
or
import { initStripe } from '@stripe/stripe-react-native';
function App() {
// ...
useEffect(() => {
initStripe({
publishableKey: publishableKey,
merchantIdentifier: 'merchant.identifier',
});
}, []);
}
You can find more details about the StripeProvider
component in the API reference.
Certain payment methods require a webhook listener to notify you of changes in the status. When developing locally, you can use the Stripe CLI to forward webhook events to your local dev server.
- Install the
stripe-cli
- Run
stripe listen --forward-to localhost:4242/webhook
- The CLI will print a webhook secret (such as,
whsec_***
) to the console. Set STRIPE_WEBHOOK_SECRET to this value in yourexample/.env
file.
This library includes a built in mock file for Jest. In order to use it, add the following code to the Jest setup file:
import mock from '@stripe/stripe-react-native/jest/mock.js';
jest.mock('@stripe/stripe-react-native', () => mock);
To have a more control over the mocks, you can extend and override particular methods e.g.:
const presentApplePayMock = jest.fn();
jest.mock('@stripe/stripe-react-native', () => ({
...mock,
presentApplePay: presentApplePayMock,
}));
See the contributor guidelines to learn how to contribute to the repository or to learn how to run the example app.
While building your iOS project, you may see a Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64
error. This is caused by react-native init
template configuration that is not fully compatible with Swift 5.1.
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"(extension in Foundation):__C.NSScanner.scanUpToString(Swift.String) -> Swift.String?", referenced from:
static Stripe.STPPhoneNumberValidator.formattedRedactedPhoneNumber(for: Swift.String, forCountryCode: Swift.String?) -> Swift.String in libStripe.a(STPPhoneNumberValidator.o)
"__swift_FORCE_LOAD_$_swiftUniformTypeIdentifiers", referenced from:
__swift_FORCE_LOAD_$_swiftUniformTypeIdentifiers_$_Stripe in libStripe.a(PKPaymentAuthorizationViewController+Stripe_Blocks.o)
Follow these steps to resolve this:
- Open your project via Xcode, go to
project -> build settings
, findlibrary search paths
and remove all swift related entries such as:$(TOOLCHAIN_DIR)/usr/lib/swift/$(PLATFORM_NAME)
and$(TOOLCHAIN_DIR)/usr/lib/swift-5.0/$(PLATFORM_NAME)
. - Create a new Swift file to the project (File > New > File > Swift), give it any name (e.g.
Fix.swift
) and create a bridging header when prompted by Xcode.
You might see error this whilst initializing the StripeProvider
component with Expo. This is caused by using an older version of Expo before stripe-react-native was officially supported. Updating Expo Go from the stores (or locally on simulators installed with expo install:client:[ios|android]
) should fix the problem.
If you're still having troubles, please open an issue or jump in our developer chat.