Apple Pay on the Web
Interactive Demo
Try an Apple Pay test transaction using the button below.
Transactions made on this site do not charge your card.
Transactions made on this site do not charge your card.
Overview
Use this page to learn how to enable Apple Pay on the web using
Apple Pay JS or the
Payment Request API.
This demo preconfigures the Apple Pay button below with default values. Explore further by
modifying values in the code blocks throughout the page to customize payment sheet experiences.
This demo displays a transcript of server responses after each transaction for context. Click or
tap the the "Show Transcript" tab to view the transaction transcript.
As well as letting you try out the Apple Pay JavaScript APIs, this demo can also serve as a
tutorial for your own implementation. It assumes you have already set up your environment to process Apple Pay transactions, and
are
familiar with Apple Pay best practices. Before starting your integration, we recommend
reviewing Getting
Started with Apple Pay and the Apple Pay on the Web Human Interface Guidelines.
For more information about supporting Apple Pay on your website, see
Apple Pay on the Web.
This demo generates source code that you can copy into your own project. Click or tap the
the "Show Source" tab to view the source code. The demo updates the source code as you change
values in the code blocks through the page. Once you are happy with the configuration, click or
tap the "Copy" button inside the "Show Source" tab to copy the source code to your clipboard.
Choose the JavaScript API you want to explore.
Requirements
This demo uses Apple Pay JS version 3, and to run this demo you must be using:
- iOS devices running iOS 11 or later
- Safari 11 on macOS 10.13 or later
Display an Apple Pay button
To display an Apple Pay Button, use the following code to load the button script into your webpage from the
content delivery network:
<script src="https://applepay.cdn-apple.com/jsapi/v1/apple-pay-sdk.js"></script>
The JavaScript Apple Pay button provides a variety of Apple Pay button types that you can use on your website to
initiate a transaction. You can specify the Apple Pay button style, type, and localization using attributes. Use
CSS to set other properties, such as the size and corner radius. Using the official Apple Pay button element
ensures your site will display the latest style, render correctly across devices, and follow Apple Guidelines.
For design guidance, see Human Interface Guidelines > Apple Pay > Buttons and Marks.
Try it: Display Settings
Use the following tools to try the different display settings on the button shown below:
Button Style
›
Button Type
›
Button Language
›
Button Width
Button Height
Button Corner Radius
Button Padding Y
Button Padding X
Button Box Sizing
›
<style> apple-pay-button { --apple-pay-button-width: 150px; --apple-pay-button-height: 30px; --apple-pay-button-border-radius: 3px; --apple-pay-button-padding: 0px 0px; --apple-pay-button-box-sizing: border-box; } </style> <apple-pay-button buttonstyle="" type="plain" locale="en"></apple-pay-button>
Create a Payment Request
When your customer clicks or taps the Apple Pay button, you must first construct an
ApplePaySession object which
includes the ApplePayPaymentRequest dictionary detailing the
transaction details the payment sheet will display.
The
ApplePayPaymentRequest requires details
including: the total payment for the transaction, the currency, and the supported payment networks. You can
optionally pass lineItems to show additional charges and discounts, and
shippingMethods to allow the customer to choose from
different shipping options. If you require address or contact details from your customer, request them by
passing values in the requiredShippingContactFields or requiredBillingContactFields.
Try it: ApplePayPaymentRequest
Modify the values in the
ApplePayPaymentRequest shown below and click or tap the
Apple Pay button to view the payment sheet. Choose Basic Request to see a payment sheet with only the
required fields. Choose Detailed Request to show code including optional fields, such as lineItems.
Complete Merchant Validation
Before being able to display the payment sheet to the customer, you must generate a valid payment session by
interacting with Apple Pay Servers. For security reasons, your server must do this, not your browser client
code, unlike everything else in this demo. To start the merchant validation process, call the
begin method on the session object you created above.
Once you do, the browser will invoke your
onvalidatemerchant handler, which must fetch a merchant
session from your server.
Refer to the instructions in Requesting an Apple Pay Payment Session document to implement your server endpoint
responsible for fetching the merchant session object from Apple Pay servers. If successful, Apple Pay servers
will return a merchant session object, which your server must then pass back as the response to the browser.
Once you have the merchant session response object in the browser, you must complete your
onvalidatemerchant handler by passing that object to the
completeMerchantValidation method on the session object.
The browser will then display the payment sheet.
The following code shows an example of how to validate merchant:
session.onvalidatemerchant = event => { // Call your own server to request a new merchant session. fetch("/authorizeMerchant") .then(res => res.json()) // Parse response as JSON. .then(merchantSession => { session.completeMerchantValidation(merchantSession); }) .catch(err => { console.error("Error fetching merchant session", err); }); };
Respond to Payment Sheet Interactions
After merchant validation is complete, Apple Pay provides the information about your customer’s payment sheet
selections so that you can calculate the final transaction cost. The final details of a transaction may depend
on user payment method, billing address, shipping address, or shipping method.
To handle these adjustments, implement the optional handlers
onpaymentmethodselected,
onshippingmethodselected,
and
onshippingcontactselected. When the browser calls one of
these handlers, you have 30 seconds to process it and call the corresponding callback function, otherwise the
transaction times out. All callbacks accept an object with newTotal (required) and newLineItems (optional) keys. In addition, you may
specify newShippingMethods to update shipping methods, and errors to indicate problems with the user's selected shipping address when calling completeShippingContactSelection. You may also call the
callbacks with an empty object or null value if the payment sheet needs no changes.
| Event Handlers | Callback Function | Update Structure | Update Properties |
|---|---|---|---|
onpaymentmethodselected
|
completePaymentMethodSelection
|
ApplePayPaymentMethodUpdate
|
newTotal (required)
newLineItems (optional)
|
onshippingmethodselected
|
completeShippingMethodSelection
|
ApplePayShippingMethodUpdate
|
newTotal (required)
newLineItems (optional)
|
onshippingcontactselected
|
completeShippingContactSelection
|
ApplePayShippingContactUpdate
|
newTotal (required)
newLineItems (optional)
newShippingMethods (optional)
errors (optional)
|
Demo Note: The test transaction always passes in a default success response when it calls
completePaymentMethodSelection. The test transaction passes in
newLineItems
and
newTotal
when it calls
completeShippingMethodSelection. See responses in the transcript.
Request a Shipping Address
If you pass
requiredShippingContactFields in the
payment request with a postalAddress
value, Apple Pay provides redacted address information before the user
authenticates the transaction. After the user authenticates, Apple Pay provides the full contact information.
The redacted payment information includes only the data needed to complete
required transaction tasks, such as calculating taxes or shipping costs, and may
differ based on the user's geographic region.
The following code shows an example of a redacted payment information:
onshippingcontactselected: { "administrativeArea": "CA", "country": "United States", "countryCode": "US", "familyName": "", "givenName": "", "locality": "San Francisco", "phoneticFamilyName": "", "phoneticGivenName": "", "postalCode": "94114", "subAdministrativeArea": "", "subLocality": "" }
Try it: completeShippingContactSelection
Choose 'Success' with or without updating line items and total below. Choose 'Failure'
to see
completeShippingContactSelection response with custom
errors. You may edit the ApplePayShippingContactUpdate response object below to
experiment with different responses. Click or tap the Apple Pay button below to see how the payment sheet
displays updates or address errors.
Authorize the Payment
Finally, you must implement the
onpaymentauthorized handler, that will be responsible
for processing the transaction. After the user authenticates the transaction using Face ID, Touch ID, or their
device passcode, this handler gets called with the encrypted Apple Pay token, as well as the shipping and
billing fields if you requested them in the ApplePayPaymentRequest. To finalize the transaction,
you need to pass the encrypted payment token to your payment processor using their API.
Once you receive the response from your payment processor, call the
completePayment method on the session and indicate
either STATUS_SUCCESS, or STATUS_FAILURE with an array of associated ApplePayError objects.
You may also validate the shipping and billing info, and invoke the
completePayment method
immediately, without calling the payment processor, if you detect an problem with the selected options (for
example, if a user has selected a shipping address in a location that you do not service). Use the contactField key to specify the
exact field that is causing the error.
Try it: completePayment
Use the following values to customize the
completePayment response
below:"status": 0to indicateSTATUS_SUCCESS"status": 1to indicateSTATUS_FAILURE
Choose Success below to default to
STATUS_SUCCESS. Choose
Failure to see a completePayment
response with custom errors.
Click or tap the Apple Pay button below to see how the payment sheet completes the payment.
Additional Resources
Ready to integrate Apple Pay in to your website? Here are a few links you may
find
useful:
Questions or Feedback
Check out our
developer forums or reach out to us.
