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HomePaymentsAdd payment methodsWalletsMobilePay

MobilePay payments

Learn how to accept MobilePay, a popular payment method in Denmark and Finland.

MobilePay is a single-use card wallet payment method used in Denmark and Finland. It allows your customer to authenticate and approve payments using the MobilePay app.

When your customer pays with MobilePay, Stripe performs a card transaction using the card data we receive from MobilePay. The processing of the card transaction is invisible to your integration, and Stripe immediately notifies you whether the payment succeeded or failed.

Stripe recommends using the Mobile Payment Element, an embeddable payment form, to add MobilePay and other payment methods to your integration with the least amount of effort.

This guide covers how to accept MobilePay from your native mobile application using your own custom payment form. Your native mobile application redirects your customer to the MobilePay mobile application to complete the payment. Completing the purchase requires no additional action in the MobilePay mobile application.

Set up Stripe
Server-side
Client-side

First, you need a Stripe account. Register now.

Server-side

This integration requires endpoints on your server that talk to the Stripe API. Use the official libraries for access to the Stripe API from your server:

Command Line
Ruby
Python
PHP
Java
Node
Go
.NET
No results
# Available as a gem sudo gem install stripe
Gemfile
Ruby
Python
PHP
Java
Node
Go
.NET
No results
# If you use bundler, you can add this line to your Gemfile gem 'stripe'

Client-side

The React Native SDK is open source and fully documented. Internally, it uses the native iOS and Android SDKs. To install Stripe’s React Native SDK, run one of the following commands in your project’s directory (depending on which package manager you use):

Command Line
yarn add @stripe/stripe-react-native

Next, install some other necessary dependencies:

  • For iOS, go to the ios directory and run pod install to ensure that you also install the required native dependencies.
  • For Android, there are no more dependencies to install.

Note

We recommend following the official TypeScript guide to add TypeScript support.

Stripe initialization

To initialize Stripe in your React Native app, either wrap your payment screen with the StripeProvider component, or use the initStripe initialization method. Only the API publishable key in publishableKey is required. The following example shows how to initialize Stripe using the StripeProvider component.

import { useState, useEffect } from 'react'; import { StripeProvider } from '@stripe/stripe-react-native'; function App() { const [publishableKey, setPublishableKey] = useState(''); const fetchPublishableKey = async () => { const key = await fetchKey(); // fetch key from your server here setPublishableKey(key); }; useEffect(() => { fetchPublishableKey(); }, []); return ( <StripeProvider publishableKey={publishableKey} merchantIdentifier="merchant.identifier" // required for Apple Pay urlScheme="your-url-scheme" // required for 3D Secure and bank redirects > {/* Your app code here */} </StripeProvider> ); }

Note

Use your API test keys while you test and develop, and your live mode keys when you publish your app.

Create a PaymentIntent
Server-side
Client-side

Server-side

A PaymentIntent is an object that represents your intent to collect payment from a customer and tracks the lifecycle of the payment process through each stage.

To create and confirm a PaymentIntent on your server:

  • Specify the amount to collect and a supported currency (eur, dkk, sek, or nok).
  • Add mobilepay to the list of payment method types. Make sure that you enable MobilePay in the Dashboard.
Command Line
cURL
Stripe CLI
Ruby
Python
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Java
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No results
curl https://api.stripe.com/v1/payment_intents \ -u "
sk_test_BQokikJOvBiI2HlWgH4olfQ2
:"
\ -d amount=1099 \ -d currency=dkk \ -d "payment_method_types[]"=mobilepay \ --data-urlencode return_url="payments-example://stripe-redirect"

The PaymentIntent includes a client secret. Send the client secret to the client to confirm the PaymentIntent in the next step.

Client-side

On the client, request a PaymentIntent from your server and store its client secret:

function PaymentScreen() { const fetchPaymentIntentClientSecret = async () => { const response = await fetch(`${API_URL}/create-payment-intent`, { method: 'POST', headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json', }, body: JSON.stringify({ currency: 'dkk', }), }); const {clientSecret} = await response.json(); return clientSecret; }; const handlePayPress = async () => { // See below }; return ( <View> <Button onPress={handlePayPress} title="Pay" /> </View> ); }

The client secret is different from your API keys that authenticate Stripe API requests. Handle it carefully because it can complete the charge. Don’t log it, embed it in URLs, or expose it to anyone but the customer.

Set up a return URL (iOS only)
Client-side

When a customer exits your app (for example to authenticate in Safari or their banking app), provide a way for them to automatically return to your app. Many payment method types require a return URL. If you don’t provide one, we can’t present payment methods that require a return URL to your users, even if you’ve enabled them.

To provide a return URL:

  1. Register a custom URL. Universal links aren’t supported.
  2. Configure your custom URL.
  3. Set up your root component to forward the URL to the Stripe SDK as shown below.

Note

If you’re using Expo, set your scheme in the app.json file.

App.tsx
import { useEffect, useCallback } from 'react'; import { Linking } from 'react-native'; import { useStripe } from '@stripe/stripe-react-native'; export default function MyApp() { const { handleURLCallback } = useStripe(); const handleDeepLink = useCallback( async (url: string | null) => { if (url) { const stripeHandled = await handleURLCallback(url); if (stripeHandled) { // This was a Stripe URL - you can return or add extra handling here as you see fit } else { // This was NOT a Stripe URL – handle as you normally would } } }, [handleURLCallback] ); useEffect(() => { const getUrlAsync = async () => { const initialUrl = await Linking.getInitialURL(); handleDeepLink(initialUrl); }; getUrlAsync(); const deepLinkListener = Linking.addEventListener( 'url', (event: { url: string }) => { handleDeepLink(event.url); } ); return () => deepLinkListener.remove(); }, [handleDeepLink]); return ( <View> <AwesomeAppComponent /> </View> ); }

For more information on native URL schemes, refer to the Android and iOS docs.

Confirm MobilePay payment
Client-side

When the customer taps to pay with MobilePay, complete the payment by calling confirmPayment. This presents a webview where the customer can authorize the payment in the MobilePay application. After the customer authorizes the payment, the promise resolves with an object containing either a paymentIntent field, or an error field if an error occurred with the payment.

import {useConfirmPayment} from '@stripe/stripe-react-native'; function PaymentScreen() { const {confirmPayment, loading} = useConfirmPayment(); const fetchPaymentIntentClientSecret = async () => { // See above }; const handlePayPress = async () => { // Fetch the client secret from the backend. const clientSecret = await fetchPaymentIntentClientSecret(); const {error, paymentIntent} = await confirmPayment(clientSecret, { paymentMethodType: 'MobilePay', }); if (error) { console.log('Payment confirmation error: ', error); } else if (paymentIntent) { console.log('Successfully confirmed payment: ', paymentIntent); } }; return ( <View> <Button onPress={handlePayPress} title="Pay" disabled={loading} /> </View> ); }

Your customer has 5 minutes to authorize the payment in the MobilePay app. If the underlying card charge fails, your customer can choose a different card and retry in the MobilePay app.

Handle post-payment events

Stripe sends a payment_intent.succeeded event when the payment completes. Use the Dashboard, a custom webhook, or a partner solution to receive these events and run actions, like sending an order confirmation email to your customer, logging the sale in a database, or starting a shipping workflow.

Listen for these events rather than waiting on a callback from the client. On the client, the customer could close the browser window or quit the app before the callback executes, and malicious clients could manipulate the response. Setting up your integration to listen for asynchronous events also helps you accept more payment methods in the future. Learn about the differences between all supported payment methods.

Manually

Use the Stripe Dashboard to view all your Stripe payments, send email receipts, handle payouts, or retry failed payments.

  • View your test payments in the Dashboard

Custom code

Build a webhook handler to listen for events and build custom asynchronous payment flows. Test and debug your webhook integration locally with the Stripe CLI.

  • Build a custom webhook

Prebuilt apps

Handle common business events, like automation or marketing and sales, by integrating a partner application.

Test the integration

Use your test API keys to create a PaymentIntent. After confirming the PaymentIntent, follow the next_action redirect URL to a test page with options to authorize or fail the payment.

  • Click Authorize test payment to test the case when the payment is successful. The PaymentIntent’s status transitions from requires_action to succeeded.
  • Click Fail test payment to test the case when the customer fails to authenticate. The PaymentIntent’s status transitions from requires_action to requires_payment_method.

OptionalCancellation

Failed payments

MobilePay transactions can fail if the underlying card transaction is declined. Learn more about card declines. In this case, the PaymentMethod is detached and the PaymentIntent’s status automatically transitions to requires_payment_method.

When the PaymentIntent’s status is requires_action, your customer must authenticate the payment within 5 minutes. If no action is taken after 5 minutes, the PaymentMethod detaches and the PaymentIntent’s status automatically transitions to requires_payment_method.

Refunds and disputes

Stripe performs a card transaction using standard card rails as part of a MobilePay transaction. Refunds and disputes are subject to the Visa and Mastercard network rules.

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