About this guide
This development guide walks you through everything you need to do to build a high-quality React app integrated with Stripe. Check out the tasks below to get started. To save time, you can also use our boilerplate, which gives you a complete React codebase with all of these tasks done for you. Okay, let's dive in!
Tasks
Setup your React app
Setup a React app usingnpx create-react-app
and routing using React Router. There are many ways you can structure your app, but a common setup is to have anApp
component that defines top-level routes, with each route component imported from the/pages
directory. The rest of your components should be located in your/components
directory. You can then run your app locally with thenpm run start
command.Setup a Node (Express.js) server
This stack requires server logic, so we'll be setting up a Node (Express.js) server that we can query from our React front-end. We suggest defining your Express.js routes in a file located at/api/index.js
and then creating a file for each route handler in the/api
directory. Next make sure all requests to/api/*
get routed to your Express server port by defining a proxy in yourpackage.json
. Lastly, run your server with thenode api
command in a new terminal window.Create an Express.js route at Integrate with Stripe Checkout
/api/stripe-checkout
that receives aplanId
value, creates a new Stripe Checkout session for the given plan usingstripe.checkout.sessions.create()
, and then returns thesession
object. Next you'll create a/purchase/[planId]
page that initiates the checkout flow. This page should automatically make a request to/api/stripe-checkout
to get a new Checkout session and and then redirect to Checkout by callingstripe.redirectToCheckout(session.id)
. Finally, you'll design your plan selection UI using your component library of choice and link each plan to the/purchase/[planId]
page you've setup above.Create an Express.js route at Integrate with Stripe Customer Portal
/api/stripe-portal
that creates a new Stripe Customer Portal session usingstripe.billingPortal.sessions.create()
and then returns thesession
object. Next you'll create a/settings/billing
page that initiates the Customer Portal flow. This page should automatically make a request to/api/stripe-portal
to get a new session and then redirect to the Customer Portal using thesession.url
value. Next you'll create a settings UI using your component library of choice and link to the/settings/billing
page you setup above. Now your users can easily manage billing info and change payment methods.In order to handle Stripe payment events you'll need to setup a webhook server endpoint. Create an Express.js route at Create a Stripe webhook
/api/stripe-webhook
that uses thestripe
library to parse data from the request body, validate the event usingstripe.webhooks.constructEvent()
, and then call a handler function for each of the following events:checkout.session.completed
,invoice.payment_succeeded
,invoice.payment_failed
,customer.subscription.updated
, andcustomer.subscription.deleted
. Your event handlers should update the user in the database so that your database contains their current plan and subscription status. When running your app locally, Stripe won't be able to ping your webhook endpoint, so you'll want to make sure to use the Stripe CLI to listen to events and route them to your local/api/stripe-webhook
endpoint.
Get the code
You can get the code for this guide with our React and Stripe Boilerplate. You'll get a complete React codebase with Stripe integration, all the tasks listed above done for you, and a responsive multi-page template. It should save you about two weeks of development time.
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