Sign In With Google JavaScript API reference

This reference page describes the Sign-In JavaScript API. You can use this API to display the One Tap prompt or Sign In With Google button on your web pages.

Method: google.accounts.id.initialize

The google.accounts.id.initialize method initializes the Sign In With Google client based on the configuration object. See the following code example of the method:

google.accounts.id.initialize(IdConfiguration)

The following code example implements the google.accounts.id.initialize method with an onload function:

<script>
  window.onload = function () {
    google.accounts.id.initialize({
      client_id: 'YOUR_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID',
      callback: handleCredentialResponse
    });
    google.accounts.id.prompt();
  };
</script>

The google.accounts.id.initialize method creates a Sign In With Google client instance that can be implicitly used by all modules in the same web page.

  • You only need to call the google.accounts.id.initialize method once even if you use multiple modules (like One Tap, Personalized button, revocation, etc.) in the same web page.
  • If you do call the google.accounts.id.initialize method multiple times, only the configurations in the last call is remembered and used.

You actually reset the configurations whenever you call the google.accounts.id.initialize method, and all subsequent methods in the same web page immediately use the new configurations.

Data type: IdConfiguration

The following table lists the fields and descriptions of the IdConfiguration data type:

Field
client_id Your application's client ID
auto_select Enables automatic selection.
callback The JavaScript function that handles ID tokens. Google One Tap and the Sign In With Google button popup UX mode use this attribute.
login_uri The URL of your login endpoint. The Sign In With Google button redirect UX mode uses this attribute.
native_callback The JavaScript function that handles password credentials.
cancel_on_tap_outside Cancels the prompt if the user clicks outside the prompt.
prompt_parent_id The DOM ID of the One Tap prompt container element
nonce A random string for ID tokens
context The title and words in the One Tap prompt
state_cookie_domain If you need to call One Tap in the parent domain and its subdomains, pass the parent domain to this field so that a single shared cookie is used.
ux_mode The Sign In With Google button UX flow
allowed_parent_origin The origins that are allowed to embed the intermediate iframe. One Tap is run in the intermediate iframe mode if this field is present.
intermediate_iframe_close_callback Overrides the default intermediate iframe behavior when users manually close One Tap.
itp_support Enables upgraded One Tap UX on ITP browsers.
login_hint Skip account selection by providing a user hint.
hd Limit account selection by domain.
use_fedcm_for_prompt Allow the browser to control user sign-in prompts and mediate the sign-in flow between your website and Google.

client_id

This field is your application's client ID, which is found and created in the Google Cloud console. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Yes client_id: "CLIENT_ID.apps.googleusercontent.com"

auto_select

This field determines if an ID token is automatically returned without any user interaction when there's only one Google session that has approved your app before. The default value is false. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
boolean Optional auto_select: true

callback

This field is the JavaScript function that handles the ID token returned from the One Tap prompt or the pop-up window. This attribute is required if Google One Tap or the Sign In With Google button popup UX mode is used. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
function Required for One Tap and the popup UX mode callback: handleResponse

login_uri

This attribute is the URI of your login endpoint.

The value must exactly match one of the authorized redirect URIs for the OAuth 2.0 client, which you configured in the Google Cloud console and must conform to our Redirect URI validation rules.

This attribute may be omitted if the current page is your login page, in which case the credential is posted to this page by default.

The ID token credential response is posted to your login endpoint when a user clicks on the Sign In With Google button and redirect UX mode is used.

See the following table for further information:

Type Optional Example
URL Defaults to the URI of the current page, or the value you specify.
Only used when ux_mode: "redirect" is set.
login_uri="https://www.example.com/login"

Your login endpoint must handle POST requests containing a credential key with an ID token value in the body.

The following is an example request to your login endpoint:

POST /login HTTP/1.1
Host: www.example.com
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded

credential=ID_TOKEN

native_callback

This field is the name of the JavaScript function that handles the password credential returned from the browser's native credential manager. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
function Optional native_callback: handleResponse

cancel_on_tap_outside

This field sets whether or not to cancel the One Tap request if a user clicks outside the prompt. The default value is true. You can disable it if you set the value to false. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
boolean Optional cancel_on_tap_outside: false

prompt_parent_id

This attribute sets the DOM ID of the container element. If it's not set, the One Tap prompt is displayed in the top-right corner of the window. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional prompt_parent_id: 'parent_id'

nonce

This field is a random string used by the ID token to prevent replay attacks. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional nonce: "biaqbm70g23"

Nonce length is limited to the maximum JWT size supported by your environment, and individual browser and server HTTP size constraints.

context

This field changes the text of the title and messages in the One Tap prompt. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional context: "use"

The following table lists all the available contexts and their descriptions:

Context
signin "Sign in with Google"
signup "Sign up with Google"
use "Use with Google"

If you need to display One Tap in the parent domain and its subdomains, pass the parent domain to this field so that a single shared-state cookie is used. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional state_cookie_domain: "example.com"

ux_mode

Use this field to set the UX flow used by the Sign In With Google button. The default value is popup. This attribute has no impact on the OneTap UX. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional ux_mode: "redirect"

The following table lists the available UX modes and their descriptions.

UX Mode
popup Performs sign-in UX flow in a pop-up window.
redirect Performs sign-in UX flow by a full page redirection.

allowed_parent_origin

The origins that are allowed to embed the intermediate iframe. One Tap runs in the intermediate iframe mode if this field is present. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string or string array Optional allowed_parent_origin: "https://example.com"

The following table lists the supported value types and their descriptions.

Value Types
string A single domain URI. "https://example.com"
string array An array of domain URIs. ["https://news.example.com", "https://local.example.com"]

Wildcard prefixes are also supported. For example, "https://*.example.com" matches example.com and its subdomains at all levels (e.g news.example.com, login.news.example.com). Things to keep in mind when using wildcards:

  • Pattern strings cannot be composed of only a wildcard and a top level domain. For example https://.com and https://.co.uk are invalid; As noted above, "https://.example.com" matches example.com and its subdomains. You can also use an array to represent 2 different domains. For example, ["https://example1.com", "https://.example2.com"] matches the domains example1.com, example2.com and subdomains of example2.com
  • Wildcard domains must begin with a secure https:// scheme, and so "*.example.com" is considered invalid.

If the value of allowed_parent_origin field is invalid, the One Tap initialization of the intermediate iframe mode would fail and stop.

intermediate_iframe_close_callback

Overrides the default intermediate iframe behavior when users manually close One Tap by tapping on the 'X' button in the One Tap UI. The default behavior is to remove the intermediate iframe from the DOM immediately.

The intermediate_iframe_close_callback field takes effect only in intermediate iframe mode. And it has impact only to the intermediate iframe, instead of the One Tap iframe. The One Tap UI is removed before the callback is invoked.

Type Required Example
function Optional intermediate_iframe_close_callback: logBeforeClose

itp_support

This field determines if the upgraded One Tap UX should be enabled on browsers that support Intelligent Tracking Prevention (ITP). The default value is false. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
boolean Optional itp_support: true

login_hint

If your application knows in advance which user should be signed-in, it can provide a login hint to Google. When successful, account selection is skipped. Accepted values are: an email address or an ID token sub field value.

For more information, see the login_hint field in the OpenID Connect documentation.

Type Required Example
String, an email address or the value from an ID token sub field. Optional login_hint: 'elisa.beckett@gmail.com'

hd

When a user has multiple accounts and should only sign-in with their Workspace account use this to provide a domain name hint to Google. When successful, user accounts displayed during account selection are limited to the provided domain. A wildcard value: * offers only Workspace accounts to the user and excludes consumer accounts (user@gmail.com) during account selection.

For more information, see the hd field in the OpenID Connect documentation.

Type Required Example
String. A fully qualified domain name or *. Optional hd: '*'

use_fedcm_for_prompt

Allow the browser to control user sign-in prompts and mediate the sign-in flow between your website and Google. Defaults to false. See Migrate to FedCM page for more information.

Type Required Example
boolean Optional use_fedcm_for_prompt: true

Method: google.accounts.id.prompt

The google.accounts.id.prompt method displays the One Tap prompt or the browser native credential manager after the initialize() method is invoked. See the following code example of the method:

 google.accounts.id.prompt(/**
 @type{(function(!PromptMomentNotification):void)=} */ momentListener)

Normally, the prompt() method is called on page load. Due to the session status and user settings on the Google side, the One Tap prompt UI might not be displayed. To get notified on the UI status for different moments, pass a function to receive UI status notifications.

Notifications are fired on the following moments:

  • Display moment: This occurs after the prompt() method is called. The notification contains a boolean value to indicate whether the UI is displayed or not.
  • Skipped moment: This occurs when the One Tap prompt is closed by an auto cancel, a manual cancel, or when Google fails to issue a credential, such as when the selected session has signed out of Google.

    In these cases, we recommend that you continue on to the next identity providers, if there are any.

  • Dismissed moment: This occurs when Google successfully retrieves a credential or a user wants to stop the credential retrieval flow. For example, when the user begins to input their username and password in your login dialog, you can call the google.accounts.id.cancel() method to close the One Tap prompt and trigger a dismissed moment.

The following code example implements the skipped moment:

<script>
  window.onload = function () {
    google.accounts.id.initialize(...);
    google.accounts.id.prompt((notification) => {
      if (notification.isNotDisplayed() || notification.isSkippedMoment()) {
        // continue with another identity provider.
      }
    });
  };
</script>

Data type: PromptMomentNotification

The following table lists methods and descriptions of the PromptMomentNotification data type:

Method
isDisplayMoment() Is this notification for a display moment?

Note: When FedCM is enabled, this notification is not fired. See Migrate to FedCM page for more information.
isDisplayed() Is this notification for a display moment, and the UI is displayed?

Note: When FedCM is enabled, this notification is not fired. See Migrate to FedCM page for more information.
isNotDisplayed() Is this notification for a display moment, and the UI isn't displayed?

Note: When FedCM is enabled, this notification is not fired. See Migrate to FedCM page for more information.
getNotDisplayedReason()

The detailed reason why the UI isn't displayed. The following are possible values:

  • browser_not_supported
  • invalid_client
  • missing_client_id
  • opt_out_or_no_session
  • secure_http_required
  • suppressed_by_user
  • unregistered_origin
  • unknown_reason
Note: When FedCM is enabled, this method is not supported. See Migrate to FedCM page for more information.
isSkippedMoment() Is this notification for a skipped moment?
getSkippedReason()

The detailed reason for the skipped moment. The following are possible values:

  • auto_cancel
  • user_cancel
  • tap_outside
  • issuing_failed
Note: When FedCM is enabled, this method is not supported. See Migrate to FedCM page for more information.
isDismissedMoment() Is this notification for a dismissed moment?
getDismissedReason()

The detailed reason for the dismissal. The following are possible values:

  • credential_returned
  • cancel_called
  • flow_restarted
getMomentType()

Return a string for the moment type. The following are possible values:

  • display
  • skipped
  • dismissed

Data type: CredentialResponse

When your callback function is invoked, a CredentialResponse object is passed as the parameter. The following table lists the fields that are contained in the credential response object:

Field
credential This field is the returned ID token.
select_by This field sets how the credential is selected.
state This field is only defined when user clicks a Sign in with Google button to sign in, and the button's state attribute is specified.

credential

This field is the ID token as a base64-encoded JSON Web Token (JWT) string.

When decoded, the JWT looks like the following example:

header
{
  "alg": "RS256",
  "kid": "f05415b13acb9590f70df862765c655f5a7a019e", // JWT signature
  "typ": "JWT"
}
payload
{
  "iss": "https://accounts.google.com", // The JWT's issuer
  "nbf":  161803398874,
  "aud": "314159265-pi.apps.googleusercontent.com", // Your server's client ID
  "sub": "3141592653589793238", // The unique ID of the user's Google Account
  "hd": "gmail.com", // If present, the host domain of the user's GSuite email address
  "email": "elisa.g.beckett@gmail.com", // The user's email address
  "email_verified": true, // true, if Google has verified the email address
  "azp": "314159265-pi.apps.googleusercontent.com",
  "name": "Elisa Beckett",
                            // If present, a URL to user's profile picture
  "picture": "https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a-/e2718281828459045235360uler",
  "given_name": "Elisa",
  "family_name": "Beckett",
  "iat": 1596474000, // Unix timestamp of the assertion's creation time
  "exp": 1596477600, // Unix timestamp of the assertion's expiration time
  "jti": "abc161803398874def"
}

The sub field is a globally unique identifier for the Google Account. Only use sub field as identifier for the user as it is unique among all Google Accounts and never reused. Don't use email address as an identifier because a Google Account can have multiple email addresses at different points in time.

Using the email, email_verified and hd fields you can determine if Google hosts and is authoritative for an email address. In cases where Google is authoritative the user is confirmed to be the legitimate account owner.

Cases where Google is authoritative:

  • email has a @gmail.com suffix, this is a Gmail Account.
  • email_verified is true and hd is set, this is a Google Workspace account.

Users may register for Google Accounts without using Gmail or Google Workspace. When email does not contain a @gmail.com suffix and hd is absent Google is not authoritative and password or other challenge methods are recommended to verify the user. email_verfied can also be true as Google initially verified the user when the Google Account was created, however ownership of the third party email account may have since changed.

The exp field shows the expiration time for you to verify the token on your server side. It is one hour for the ID token obtained from Sign In With Google. You need to verify the token before the expiration time. Don't use exp for session management. An expired ID token does not mean the user is signed out. Your app is responsible for session management of your users.

select_by

The following table lists the possible values for the select_by field. The type of button used along with the session and consent state are used to set the value,

  • The user pressed either the One Tap or Sign In With Google button or used the touchless Automatic sign-in process.

  • An existing session was found, or the user selected and signed-in to a Google Account to establish a new session.

  • Prior to sharing ID token credentials with your app the user either

    • pressed the Confirm button to grant their consent to share credentials, or
    • had previously granted consent and used Select an Account to choose a Google Account.

The value of this field is set to one of these types,

Value Description
auto Automatic sign-in of a user with an existing session who had previously granted consent to share credentials. Applies only to non-FedCM supported browsers.
user A user with an existing session who had previously granted consent pressed the One Tap 'Continue as' button to share credentials. Applies only to non-FedCM supported browsers.
fedcm A user pressed the One Tap 'Continue as' button to share credentials using FedCM. Applies only to FedCM supported browsers.
fedcm_auto Automatic sign-in of a user with an existing session who had previously granted consent to share credentials using FedCM One Tap. Applies only to FedCM supported browsers.
user_1tap A user with an existing session pressed the One Tap 'Continue as' button to grant consent and share credentials. Applies only to Chrome v75 and higher.
user_2tap A user without an existing session pressed the One Tap 'Continue as' button to select an account and then pressed the Confirm button in a pop-up window to grant consent and share credentials. Applies to non-Chromium based browsers.
btn A user with an existing session who previously granted consent pressed the Sign In With Google button and selected a Google Account from 'Choose an Account' to share credentials.
btn_confirm A user with an existing session pressed the Sign In With Google button and pressed the Confirm button to grant consent and share credentials.
btn_add_session A user without an existing session who previously granted consent pressed the Sign In With Google button to select a Google Account and share credentials.
btn_confirm_add_session A user without an existing session first pressed the Sign In With Google button to select a Google Account and then pressed the Confirm button to consent and share credentials.

state

This field is only defined when user clicks a Sign in with Google button to sign in, and the clicked button's state attribute is specified. The value of this field is the same value you specified in the button's state attribute.

As multiple Sign in with Google buttons can be rendered on the same page, you can assign each button with a unique string. Hence, you can this state field to identify which button user clicked to sign in.

Method: google.accounts.id.renderButton

The google.accounts.id.renderButton method renders a Sign In With Google button in your web pages.

See the following code example of the method:

google.accounts.id.renderButton(
      /** @type{!HTMLElement} */ parent,
      /** @type{!GsiButtonConfiguration} */ options
    )

Data type: GsiButtonConfiguration

The following table lists the fields and descriptions of the GsiButtonConfiguration data type:

Attribute
type The button type: icon, or standard button.
theme The button theme. For example, filled_blue or filled_black.
size The button size. For example, small or large.
text The button text. For example, "Sign in with Google" or "Sign up with Google".
shape The button shape. For example, rectangular or circular.
logo_alignment The Google logo alignment: left or center.
width The button width, in pixels.
locale If set, then the button language is rendered.
click_listener If set, this function is called when the Sign in with Google button is clicked.
state If set, this string returns with the ID token.

Attribute types

The following sections contain details about each attribute's type, and an example.

type

The button type. The default value is standard.

See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Yes type: "icon"

The following table lists the available button types and their descriptions:

Type
standard
Button with text or personalized information.
icon
An icon button without text.

theme

The button theme. The default value is outline. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional theme: "filled_blue"

The following table lists the available themes and their descriptions:

Theme
outline
A standard button theme.
filled_blue
A blue-filled button theme.
filled_black
A black-filled button theme.

size

The button size. The default value is large. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional size: "small"

The following table lists the available button sizes and their descriptions:

Size
large
A large standard button A large icon button A large, personalized button
A large button.
medium
A medium standard button A medium icon button
A medium-sized button.
small
A small button A small icon button
A small button.

text

The button text. The default value is signin_with. There are no visual differences for the text of icon buttons that have different text attributes. The only exception is when the text is read for screen accessibility.

See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional text: "signup_with"

The following table lists all the available button texts and their descriptions:

Text
signin_with
The button text is "Sign in with Google".
signup_with
The button text is "Sign up with Google".
continue_with
The button text is "Continue with Google".
signin
The button text is "Sign in".

shape

The button shape. The default value is rectangular. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional shape: "rectangular"

The following table lists the available button shapes and their descriptions:

Shape
rectangular
The rectangular-shaped button. If used for the icon button type, then it's the same as square.
pill
The pill-shaped button. If used for the icon button type, then it's the same as circle.
circle
The circle-shaped button. If used for the standard button type, then it's the same as pill.
square
The square-shaped button. If used for the standard button type, then it's the same as rectangular.

logo_alignment

The alignment of the Google logo. The default value is left. This attribute only applies to the standard button type. See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional logo_alignment: "center"

The following table lists the available alignments and their descriptions:

logo_alignment
left
Left-aligns the Google logo.
center
Center-aligns the Google logo.

width

The minimum button width, in pixels. The maximum width is 400 pixels.

See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional width: "400"

locale

Optional. Display button text using the specified locale, otherwise default to the users Google Account or browser settings. Add the hl parameter and language code to the src directive when loading the library, for example: gsi/client?hl=<iso-639-code>.

If it's not set, the browser's default locale or the Google session user's preference is used. Therefore, different users might see different versions of localized buttons, and possibly with different sizes.

See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional locale: "zh_CN"

click_listener

You can define a JavaScript function to be called when the Sign in with Google button is clicked using the click_listener attribute.

  google.accounts.id.renderButton(document.getElementById("signinDiv"), {
      theme: 'outline',
      size: 'large',
      click_listener: onClickHandler
    });

  
  function onClickHandler(){
    console.log("Sign in with Google button clicked...")
  }
  

In this example, the message Sign in with Google button clicked... is logged to the console when the Sign in with Google button is clicked.

state

Optional, as multiple Sign in with Google buttons can be rendered on the same page, you can assign each button with a unique string. The same string would return along with the ID token, so you can identify which button user clicked to sign in.

See the following table for further information:

Type Required Example
string Optional data-state="button 1"

Data type: Credential

When your native_callback function is invoked, a Credential object is passed as the parameter. The following table lists the fields contained in the object:

Field
id Identifies the user.
password The password

Method: google.accounts.id.disableAutoSelect

When the user signs out of your website, you need to call the method google.accounts.id.disableAutoSelect to record the status in cookies. This prevents a UX dead loop. See the following code snippet of the method:

google.accounts.id.disableAutoSelect()

The following code example implements the google.accounts.id.disableAutoSelect method with an onSignout() function:

<script>
  function onSignout() {
    google.accounts.id.disableAutoSelect();
  }
</script>

Method: google.accounts.id.storeCredential

This method is a wrapper for the store() method of the browser's native credential manager API. Therefore, it can only be used to store a password credential. See the following code example of the method:

google.accounts.id.storeCredential(Credential, callback)

The following code example implements the google.accounts.id.storeCredential method with an onSignIn() function:

<script>
  function onSignIn() {
    let cred = {id: '...', password: '...'};
    google.accounts.id.storeCredential(cred);
  }
</script>

Method: google.accounts.id.cancel

You can cancel the One Tap flow if you remove the prompt from the relying party DOM. The cancel operation is ignored if a credential is already selected. See the following code example of the method:

google.accounts.id.cancel()

The following code example implements the google.accounts.id.cancel() method with an onNextButtonClicked() function:

<script>
  function onNextButtonClicked() {
    google.accounts.id.cancel();
    showPasswordPage();
  }
</script>

Library load callback: onGoogleLibraryLoad

You can register an onGoogleLibraryLoad callback. It's notified after the Sign In With Google JavaScript library is loaded:

window.onGoogleLibraryLoad = () => {
    ...
};

This callback is just a shortcut for the window.onload callback. There are no differences in behavior.

The following code example implements an onGoogleLibraryLoad callback:

<script>
  window.onGoogleLibraryLoad = () => {
   google.accounts.id.initialize({
     ...
   });
   google.accounts.id.prompt();
  };
</script>

Method: google.accounts.id.revoke

The google.accounts.id.revoke method revokes the OAuth grant used to share the ID token for the specified user. See the following code snippet of the method: javascript google.accounts.id.revoke(login_hint, callback)

Parameter Type Description
login_hint string The email address or unique ID of the user's Google Account. The ID is the sub property of the credential payload.
callback function Optional RevocationResponse handler.

The following code sample shows how use the revoke method with an ID.

  google.accounts.id.revoke('1618033988749895', done => {
    console.log(done.error);
  });

Data type: RevocationResponse

When your callback function is invoked, a RevocationResponse object is passed as the parameter. The following table lists the fields that are contained in the revocation response object:

Field
successful This field is the return value of the method call.
error This field optionally contains a detailed error response message.

successful

This field is a boolean value set to true if the revoke method call succeeded or false on failure.

error

This field is a string value and contains a detailed error message if the revoke method call failed, it is undefined on success.