Stripe Elements is a set of prebuilt UI components, like inputs and buttons, for building your checkout flow. It’s available as a feature of Stripe.js. Stripe.js tokenizes the sensitive information within an Element without ever having it touch your server.
Elements includes features like:
- Formatting card information automatically as it’s entered
- Translating placeholders into your customer’s preferred language
- Using responsive design to fit the width of your customer’s screen or mobile device
- Customizing the styling to match the look and feel of your checkout flow
This integration shows you how to accept payments with Stripe Elements.
Recommended approach is to install with the Stripe CLI:
stripe samples create accept-a-payment
Then pick:
custom-payment-flow
This sample includes several different server implementations and several different client implementations. The servers all implement the same routes and the clients all work with the same server routes.
Pick a server:
Pick a client:
Installing and cloning manually
If you do not want to use the Stripe CLI, you can manually clone and configure the sample yourself:
git clone https://github.com/stripe-samples/accept-a-payment
Rename and move the .env.example
file into a file named
.env
in the specific folder of the server language you want to use. For
example:
cp .env.example custom-payment-flow/server/node/.env
Example .env
file:
STRIPE_PUBLISHABLE_KEY=<replace-with-your-publishable-key>
STRIPE_SECRET_KEY=<replace-with-your-secret-key>
STATIC_DIR=../../client/html
DOMAIN=http://localhost:4242
You will need a Stripe account in order to run the demo. Once you set up your account, go to the Stripe developer dashboard to find your API keys.
The other environment variables are configurable:
STATIC_DIR
tells the server where to the client files are located and does not need to be modified unless you move the server files.
DOMAIN
is the domain of your website, where Checkout will redirect back to after the customer completes the payment on the Checkout page.
2. Follow the server instructions on how to run
Pick the server language you want and follow the instructions in the server folder README on how to run.
For example, if you want to run the Node server:
cd server/node # there's a README in this folder with instructions
npm install
npm start
If you're running the react client, then the sample will run in the browser at
localhost:3000
otherwise visit localhost:4242
.
4. [Optional] Run a webhook locally
You can use the Stripe CLI to easily spin up a local webhook.
First install the CLI and link your Stripe account.
stripe listen --forward-to localhost:4242/webhook
The CLI will print a webhook secret key to the console. Set STRIPE_WEBHOOK_SECRET
to this value in your .env
file.
You should see events logged in the console where the CLI is running.
When you are ready to create a live webhook endpoint, follow our guide in the docs on configuring a webhook endpoint in the dashboard.