Get started with React
Learn to install and initialize Clerk in a new Create React App.
Overview
Clerk is the easiest way to add authentication and user management to your React application. This guide will walk you through the necessary steps to install and use Clerk in a new create-react-app application.
After following this guide, you should have a working React app complete with:
- Fully fledged sign in and sign up flows.
- Google Social Login.
- Secure email/password authentication.
- A prebuilt user profile page.
Looking for a quickstart? We created a demo app to show you how to add Clerk to your project.
Before you start
You need to create a Clerk Application in your Clerk Dashboard. For more information, check out our Set up your application guide.
Creating a new React app
Start by creating a new React application - this is usually done using the create-react-app CLI:
1npx create-react-app
1yarn create react-app
Installing Clerk
Once you have a React app ready, you need to install the Clerk React SDK. This will give you access to our prebuilt Clerk Components and React hooks.
1# Navigate to your application's root directory2# This should be the actual name from3# the previous step4cd my-first-application56# Install the clerk-react package7npm install @clerk/clerk-react
1# Navigate to your application's root directory2# This should be the actual name from3# the previous step4cd my-first-application56# Install the clerk-react package7yarn add @clerk/clerk-react
Set Environment Keys
Below is an example of your .env.local
file. To get the respective keys go to the API Keys page in the Clerk dashboard.
.env.local1
It is also possible to pass these keys into the Clerk components and functions manually.
Clerk is now successfully installed!
To run your app, start the development server and navigate to http://localhost:3000.
1npm start
1yarn start
For more details, consult the Clerk React installation page.
Adding <ClerkProvider />
Clerk requires your application to be wrapped in the <ClerkProvider/>
context. In React, we add this in src/App.jsx
.
Wrap your app with <ClerkProvider/>
and pass the REACT_APP_CLERK_PUBLISHABLE_KEY
env variable you just created to the publishableKey
prop. Replace your src/App.jsx
with:
import React from "react";import "./App.css";import { ClerkProvider } from "@clerk/clerk-react";const clerkPubKey = process.env.REACT_APP_CLERK_PUBLISHABLE_KEY;function App() {return (// Wrap your entire app with ClerkProvider// Don't forget to pass the publishableKey prop<ClerkProvider publishableKey={clerkPubKey}><Hello /></ClerkProvider>);}function Hello() {return <div>Hello from Clerk</div>;}export default App;
Navigate to http://localhost:3000 so we can start viewing the changes but note that you won't see any changes yet.
Requiring authentication
The easiest way to require authentication before showing a protected page is to use our Control Components:
-
<SignedIn/>
: Renders its children only when a user is signed in. -
<SignedOut/>
: Renders its children only when there's no active user. -
<RedirectToSignIn/>
: Triggers a redirect to the sign in page.
The following example shows you how to compose our flexible Control Components to build auth flows that match your needs. Please note that you don't need to use any additional APIs, everything shown below is just Javascript.
Visit http://localhost:3000 to see your page - you'll immediately get redirected to the Clerk Hosted Sign In page:
import React from "react";import "./App.css";import {ClerkProvider,SignedIn,SignedOut,UserButton,useUser,RedirectToSignIn,} from "@clerk/clerk-react";// Get the Publishable Key from the environmentconst clerk_pub_key = process.env.REACT_APP_CLERK_PUBLISHABLE_KEY;function App() {return (// Wrap your entire app with ClerkProvider// Don't forget to pass the frontendApi prop<ClerkProvider publishableKey={clerk_pub_key}><SignedIn><Hello /></SignedIn><SignedOut><RedirectToSignIn /></SignedOut></ClerkProvider>);}function Hello() {return <div>Hello from Clerk</div>;}export default App;
Hello, world!
That's all you need to start using Clerk. Now you can say hello to your user!
Let's edit the <Hello/>
component. We're going to use the useUser
hook and the UserButton
component as shown in the example:
import React from "react";import "./App.css";import {ClerkProvider,SignedIn,SignedOut,UserButton,useUser,RedirectToSignIn,} from "@clerk/clerk-react";const clerk_pub_key = process.env.REACT_APP_CLERK_PUBLISHABLE_KEY;function App() {return (// Wrap your entire app with ClerkProvider<ClerkProvider publishableKey={clerk_pub_key}><SignedIn><Hello /></SignedIn><SignedOut><RedirectToSignIn /></SignedOut></ClerkProvider>);}function Hello() {// Get the user's first nameconst { user } = useUser();return (<div className="App-header">{/* Mount the UserButton component */}<UserButton />{user ? <h1>Hello, {user.firstName}!</h1> : null}</div>);}export default App;
Visit https://localhost:3000 again to see your page. If you haven't signed in yet, you will be redirected to the sign in page. Sign in using your preferred method and the home page will become accessible.
By default, your app will use the Clerk Hosted Pages to display the sign-in and sign-up flows. Check the documentation of the <SignIn/> and <SignUp/> components to learn how you can mount them directly in your app.
Optionally, we can add a router. Here's how:
Adding a router
<ClerkProvider/>
also accepts a navigate
prop that enables Clerk to navigate inside your application without a full page reload, using the same routing logic your app does. Our display components use this prop when navigating between subpages, and when navigating to callback URLs.
You can pass the navigate
prop a function that takes the destination URL as an argument and performs a "push" navigation. You should not implement the push yourself, but instead, wrap the push function provided by your router. Most React apps use the popular react-router-dom, which is also what we'll be using for this guide. Install it by running the following command:
1npm i react-router-dom
1yarn add react-router-dom
In order to give ClerkProvider access to your router, by adding the navigate
prop. In src/App.jsx
import and use the useNavigate
hook, as shown in the example:
import {ClerkProvider,SignedIn,SignIn,SignUp} from "@clerk/clerk-react";import {BrowserRouter,Route,Routes,useNavigate} from "react-router-dom";const clerk_pub_key = process.env.REACT_APP_CLERK_PUBLISHABLE_KEY;function PublicPage() {return <h1>Public page</h1>;}function ProtectedPage() {return <h1>Protected page</h1>;}function ClerkProviderWithRoutes() {const navigate = useNavigate();return (<ClerkProviderpublishableKey={clerk_pub_key}navigate={(to) => navigate(to)}><Routes><Route path="/" element={<PublicPage />} /><Routepath="/sign-in/*"element={<SignIn routing="path" path="/sign-in" />}/><Routepath="/sign-up/*"element={<SignUp routing="path" path="/sign-up" />}/><Routepath="/protected"element={<SignedIn><ProtectedPage /></SignedIn>}/></Routes></ClerkProvider>);}function App() {return (<BrowserRouter><ClerkProviderWithRoutes /></BrowserRouter>);}export default App;
Next steps
You now have a working React + Clerk app. Going forward, you can:
- Learn how to deploy your app to production.
- Learn more about the Clerk Components and the Clerk Hosted Pages.
- Come say hi in our Discord channel 👋