Our libraries support auto-pagination. This feature allows you to easily iterate through large lists of resources without having to manually perform the requests to fetch subsequent pages.
To use the auto-pagination feature in Java, simply issue an initial “list” call with the parameters you need, then call autoPagingIterable()
on the returned list object to iterate over all objects matching your initial parameters.
Each API request has an associated request identifier. You can find this value in the response headers, under Request-Id
. You can also find request identifiers in the URLs of individual request logs in your Dashboard.
To expedite the resolution process, provide the request identifier when you contact us about a specific request.
Each major release, such as Acacia, includes changes that aren’t backward-compatible with previous releases. Upgrading to a new major release can require updates to existing code. Each monthly release includes only backward-compatible changes, and uses the same name as the last major release. You can safely upgrade to a new monthly release without breaking any existing code. The current version is 2025-07-30.basil. For information on all API versions, view our API changelog.
Because stripe-java
is strongly typed, requests that you send using it are fixed to the API version that was the latest at the time your version of stripe-java
was released. To use an newer or older API version, upgrade or downgrade your version of stripe-java
. Use the stripe-java changelog to find which versions include the API version you need.
Webhook events use the API version that’s set during your webhook’s endpoint creation. Otherwise, they use your Stripe account’s default API version (controlled in Workbench). Create a webhook endpoint with an API version equal to the version that’s pinned by your version of stripe-java
, which you can determine through the Stripe.
property.
You can upgrade your API version in Workbench. As a precaution, use API versioning to test a new API version before committing to an upgrade.
This is an object representing your Stripe balance. You can retrieve it to see the balance currently on your Stripe account.
You can also retrieve the balance history, which contains a list of transactions that contributed to the balance (charges, payouts, and so forth).
The available and pending amounts for each currency are broken down further by payment source types.
Related guide: Understanding Connect account balances
Balance transactions represent funds moving through your Stripe account. Stripe creates them for every type of transaction that enters or leaves your Stripe account balance.
Related guide: Balance transaction types