This plugin allows you to add an email contact form to your website.
This plugin requires Craft CMS 3.0.0-RC11 or later. (For Craft 2 use the v1
branch.)
You can install this plugin from the Plugin Store or with Composer.
Go to the Plugin Store in your project’s Control Panel and search for “Contact Form”. Then click on the “Install” button in its modal window.
Open your terminal and run the following commands:
# go to the project directory
cd /path/to/my-project.test
# tell Composer to load the plugin
composer require craftcms/contact-form
# tell Craft to install the plugin
./craft install/plugin contact-form
If you’re in the process of upgrading a Craft 2 project to Craft 3, follow these instructions to get Contact Form back up and running:
- Install Contact Form 2.x.
- Update the
action
input values in your form templates fromcontactForm/sendMessage
tocontact-form/send
. - Make sure the
redirect
input values in your form templates are hashed. - If you have a
craft/config/contactform.php
file, move it toconfig/
and rename it tocontact-form.php
. - If you were using the honeypot captcha feature, install the new Contact Form Honeypot plugin.
Your contact form template can look something like this:
{% macro errorList(errors) %}
{% if errors %}
<ul class="errors">
{% for error in errors %}
<li>{{ error }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endif %}
{% endmacro %}
{% from _self import errorList %}
<form method="post" action="" accept-charset="UTF-8">
{{ csrfInput() }}
<input type="hidden" name="action" value="contact-form/send">
{{ redirectInput('contact/thanks') }}
<h3><label for="from-name">Your Name</label></h3>
<input id="from-name" type="text" name="fromName" value="{{ message.fromName ?? '' }}">
{{ message is defined and message ? errorList(message.getErrors('fromName')) }}
<h3><label for="from-email">Your Email</label></h3>
<input id="from-email" type="email" name="fromEmail" value="{{ message.fromEmail ?? '' }}">
{{ message is defined and message ? errorList(message.getErrors('fromEmail')) }}
<h3><label for="subject">Subject</label></h3>
<input id="subject" type="text" name="subject" value="{{ message.subject ?? '' }}">
{{ message is defined and message ? errorList(message.getErrors('subject')) }}
<h3><label for="message">Message</label></h3>
<textarea rows="10" cols="40" id="message" name="message">{{ message.message ?? '' }}</textarea>
{{ message is defined and message ? errorList(message.getErrors('message')) }}
<input type="submit" value="Send">
</form>
The only required fields are fromEmail
and message
. Everything else is optional.
If you have a redirect
hidden input, the user will get redirected to it upon successfully sending the email. The following variables can be used within the URL/path you set:
{fromName}
{fromEmail}
{subject}
For example, if you wanted to redirect to a contact/thanks
page and pass the sender’s name to it, you could set the input like this:
{{ redirectInput('contact/thanks?from={fromName}') }}
On your contact/thanks.html
template, you can access that from
parameter using craft.app.request.getQueryParam()
:
<p>Thanks for sending that in, {{ craft.app.request.getQueryParam('from') }}!</p>
Note that if you don’t include a redirect
input, the current page will get reloaded.
When a contact form is submitted, the plugin will set a notice
or success
flash message on the user session. You can display it in your template like this:
{% if craft.app.session.hasFlash('notice') %}
<p class="message notice">{{ craft.app.session.getFlash('notice') }}</p>
{% elseif craft.app.session.hasFlash('error') %}
<p class="message error">{{ craft.app.session.getFlash('error') }}</p>
{% endif %}
You can add additional fields to your form by splitting your message
field into multiple fields, using an array syntax for the input names:
<h3><label for="message">Message</label></h3>
<textarea rows="10" cols="40" id="message" name="message[body]">{{ message.message.body ?? '' }}</textarea>
<h3><label for="phone">Your phone number</label></h3>
<input id="phone" type="text" name="message[Phone]" value="">
<h3>What services are you interested in?</h3>
<label><input type="checkbox" name="message[Services][]" value="Design"> Design</label>
<label><input type="checkbox" name="message[Services][]" value="Development"> Development</label>
<label><input type="checkbox" name="message[Services][]" value="Strategy"> Strategy</label>
<label><input type="checkbox" name="message[Services][]" value="Marketing"> Marketing</label>
If you have a primary “Message” field, you should name it message[body]
, like in that example.
An email sent with the above form might result in the following message:
• Name: John Doe
• Email: example@email.com
• Phone: (555) 123-4567
• Services: Design, Development
Hey guys, I really loved this simple contact form (I'm so tired of agencies
asking for everything but my social security number up front), so I trust
you guys know a thing or two about usability.
I run a small coffee shop and we want to start attracting more freelancer-
types to spend their days working from our shop (and sipping fine coffee!).
A clean new website with lots of social media integration would probably
help us out quite a bit there. Can you help us with that?
Hope to hear from you soon.
Cathy Chino
If you create a config file in your config/
folder called contact-form.php
, you can override
the plugin’s settings in the Control Panel. Since that config file is fully multi-environment aware, this is
a handy way to have different settings across multiple environments.
Here’s what that config file might look like along with a list of all of the possible values you can override.
<?php
return [
'toEmail' => 'bond@007.com',
'prependSubject' => '',
'prependSender' => '',
'allowAttachments' => false,
'successFlashMessage' => 'Message sent!'
];
You can programmatically add email recipients from your template by adding a hidden input field named toEmail
like so:
<input type="hidden" name="toEmail" value="{{ 'me@example.com'|hash }}">
If you want to add multiple recipients, you can provide a comma separated list of emails like so:
<input type="hidden" name="toEmail" value="{{ 'me@example.com,me2@example.com'|hash }}">
Then from your config/contact-form.php
config file, you’ll need to add a bit of logic:
<?php
$config = [];
$request = Craft::$app->request;
if (
!$request->getIsConsoleRequest() &&
($toEmail = $request->getValidatedBodyParam('toEmail')) !== null
) {
$config['toEmail'] = $toEmail;
}
return $config;
In this example if toEmail
does not exist or fails validation (it was tampered with), the plugin will fallback to the “To Email” defined in the plugin settings, so you must have that defined as well.
If you would like your contact form to accept file attachments, follow these steps:
- Go to Settings → Contact Form in the Control Panel, and make sure the plugin is set to allow attachments.
- Make sure your opening HTML
<form>
tag containsenctype="multipart/form-data"
. - Add a
<input type="file" name="attachment">
to your form. - If you want to allow multiple file attachments, use multiple
<input type="file" name="attachment[]" multiple>
inputs.
You can optionally post contact form submissions over Ajax if you’d like. Just send a POST request to your site with all of the same data that would normally be sent:
$('#my-form').submit(function(ev) {
// Prevent the form from actually submitting
ev.preventDefault();
// Send it to the server
$.post({
url: '/',
dataType: 'json',
data: $(this).serialize(),
success: function(response) {
if (response.success) {
$('#thanks').fadeIn();
} else {
// response.error will be an object containing any validation errors that occurred, indexed by field name
// e.g. response.error.fromName => ['From Name is required']
alert('An error occurred. Please try again.');
}
}
});
});
Modules and plugins can be notified when a submission is being validated, providing their own custom validation logic, using the afterValidate
event on the Submission
model:
use craft\contactform\models\Submission;
use yii\base\Event;
// ...
Event::on(Submission::class, Submission::EVENT_AFTER_VALIDATE, function(Event $e) {
/** @var Submission $submission */
$submission = $e->sender;
// Make sure that `message[Phone]` was filled in
if (empty($submission->message['Phone'])) {
// Add the error
// (This will be accessible via `message.getErrors('message.phone')` in the template.)
$submission->addError('message.phone', 'A phone number is required.');
}
});
Modules and plugins can be notified right before a message is sent out to the recipients using the beforeSend
event. This is also an opportunity to flag the message as spam, preventing it from getting sent:
use craft\contactform\events\SendEvent;
use craft\contactform\Mailer;
use yii\base\Event;
// ...
Event::on(Mailer::class, Mailer::EVENT_BEFORE_SEND, function(SendEvent $e) {
$isSpam = // custom spam detection logic...
if (!$isSpam) {
$e->isSpam = true;
}
});
Modules and plugins can be notified right after a message is sent out to the recipients using the afterSend
event.
use craft\contactform\events\SendEvent;
use craft\contactform\Mailer;
use yii\base\Event;
// ...
Event::on(Mailer::class, Mailer::EVENT_AFTER_SEND, function(SendEvent $e) {
// custom logic...
});
Support for the honeypot captcha technique to fight spam has been moved to a separate plugin that complements this one.