Emails
Send custom emails to your users with Stack Auth's email system.
Stack Auth provides emails that allows you to send custom emails to your users. The system supports both custom HTML emails and template-based emails with theming.
Email Types:
There are two types of emails that you can send to your users:
- Transactional Emails: Transactional emails are those required for your user to use your application. These emails cannot be opted out of.
- Marketing Emails: Marketing emails always contain an unsubscribe link and may be more general marketing material related to your application/company.
Never send marketing emails as transactional emails, as this can quickly lead to your domain being blacklisted by email spam filters.
Overview
The email system provides:
- Email Sending: Send custom emails to users via the
sendEmail
method onStackServerApp
- Email Templates: Use predefined email templates for common authentication flows
- Email Themes: Apply consistent styling to your emails
- Notification Categories: Allow users to control which emails they receive
Server-Side Email Sending
Basic Email Sending
Use the sendEmail
method on your server app to send emails to users:
import { stackServerApp } from './stack';
// Send a custom HTML email
const result = await stackServerApp.sendEmail({
userIds: ['user-id-1', 'user-id-2'],
subject: 'Welcome to our platform!',
html: '<h1>Welcome!</h1><p>Thanks for joining us.</p>',
});
if (result.status === 'error') {
console.error('Failed to send email:', result.error);
}
Template-Based Emails
Send emails using predefined templates with variables:
// Send email using a template
const result = await stackServerApp.sendEmail({
userIds: ['user-id'],
templateId: 'welcome-template',
subject: 'Welcome to our platform!',
variables: {
userName: 'John Doe',
activationUrl: 'https://yourapp.com/activate/token123',
supportEmail: 'support@yourapp.com',
},
});
Email Options
The sendEmail
method accepts the following options:
type SendEmailOptions = {
userIds: string[]; // Array of user IDs to send to
themeId?: string | null | false; // Theme to apply (optional)
subject?: string; // Email subject
notificationCategoryName?: string; // Notification category for user preferences
html?: string; // Custom HTML content
templateId?: string; // Template ID to use
variables?: Record<string, any>; // Template variables
};
Error Handling
The sendEmail
method returns a Result
type that can contain specific errors:
const result = await stackServerApp.sendEmail({
userIds: ['user-id'],
html: '<p>Hello!</p>',
subject: 'Test Email',
});
if (result.status === 'error') {
switch (result.error.code) {
case 'REQUIRES_CUSTOM_EMAIL_SERVER':
console.error('Please configure a custom email server');
break;
case 'SCHEMA_ERROR':
console.error('Invalid email data provided');
break;
case 'USER_ID_DOES_NOT_EXIST':
console.error('One or more user IDs do not exist');
break;
}
}
Built-in Email Templates
Stack Auth provides several built-in email templates for common authentication flows:
- Email Verification:
email_verification
- Sent when users need to verify their email - Password Reset:
password_reset
- Sent when users request password reset - Magic Link:
magic_link
- Sent for passwordless authentication - Team Invitation:
team_invitation
- Sent when users are invited to teams - Sign-in Invitation:
sign_in_invitation
- Sent to invite users to sign up
These templates can be customized through the admin interface or programmatically.
Email Configuration
Email configuration is managed through the Stack Auth dashboard or admin API, not directly in your application code. You have two options:
Shared Email Provider (Development)
For development and testing, you can use Stack's shared email provider. This sends emails from noreply@stackframe.co
and is configured through your project settings in the Stack Auth dashboard.
- Go to your project's Email settings in the dashboard
- Select "Shared" as your email server type
- No additional configuration required
Custom Email Server (Production)
For production, configure your own SMTP server through the dashboard:
- Go to your project's Email settings in the dashboard
- Select "Custom SMTP server" as your email server type
- Configure the following settings:
- Host: Your SMTP server hostname (e.g.,
smtp.yourprovider.com
) - Port: SMTP port (typically 587 for TLS or 465 for SSL)
- Username: Your SMTP username
- Password: Your SMTP password
- Sender Email: The email address emails will be sent from
- Sender Name: The display name for your emails
- Host: Your SMTP server hostname (e.g.,
The dashboard will automatically test your configuration when you save it.
Notification Categories
Control which emails users receive by organizing them into notification categories:
await stackServerApp.sendEmail({
userIds: ['user-id'],
html: '<p>New feature available!</p>',
subject: 'Product Updates',
notificationCategoryName: 'product_updates',
});
Users can then opt in or out of specific notification categories through their account settings.
Best Practices
- Use Templates: Leverage built-in templates for consistent branding and easier maintenance
- Handle Errors: Always check the result status and handle potential errors
- Respect User Preferences: Use notification categories to let users control what emails they receive
- Server-Side Only: Always send emails from your server-side code, never from the client
React Components Integration
Emails integrates seamlessly with Stack Auth's React components. Email verification, password reset, and other authentication emails are automatically sent when users interact with the provided components.
For custom email flows, use the sendEmail
method from your server-side code:
// In your API route or server action
import { stackServerApp } from '@stackframe/stack';
export async function inviteUser(email: string) {
const result = await stackServerApp.sendEmail({
userIds: [userId], // Get user ID first
templateId: 'invitation-template',
subject: 'You\'re invited!',
variables: {
inviteUrl: 'https://yourapp.com/invite/token123',
},
});
return result;
}
This email system gives you control over your application's email communications while maintaining the security and reliability of Stack Auth's infrastructure.