Many web applications require users to verify their email addresses before using the application. Rather than forcing you to re-implement this feature by hand for each application you create, Laravel provides convenient built-in services for sending and verifying email verification requests.
Note
Want to get started fast? Install one of the Laravel application starter kits in a fresh Laravel application. The starter kits will take care of scaffolding your entire authentication system, including email verification support.
Before getting started, verify that your App\Models\User
model implements the Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\MustVerifyEmail
contract:
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\MustVerifyEmail;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
use Illuminate\Notifications\Notifiable;
class User extends Authenticatable implements MustVerifyEmail
{
use Notifiable;
// ...
}
Once this interface has been added to your model, newly registered users will automatically be sent an email containing an email verification link. As you can see by examining your application's App\Providers\EventServiceProvider
, Laravel already contains a SendEmailVerificationNotification
listener that is attached to the Illuminate\Auth\Events\Registered
event. This event listener will send the email verification link to the user.
If you are manually implementing registration within your application instead of using a starter kit, you should ensure that you are dispatching the Illuminate\Auth\Events\Registered
event after a user's registration is successful:
use Illuminate\Auth\Events\Registered;
event(new Registered($user));
Next, your users
table must contain an email_verified_at
column to store the date and time that the user's email address was verified. By default, the users
table migration included with the Laravel framework already includes this column. So, all you need to do is run your database migrations:
php artisan migrate
To properly implement email verification, three routes will need to be defined. First, a route will be needed to display a notice to the user that they should click the email verification link in the verification email that Laravel sent them after registration.
Second, a route will be needed to handle requests generated when the user clicks the email verification link in the email.
Third, a route will be needed to resend a verification link if the user accidentally loses the first verification link.
As mentioned previously, a route should be defined that will return a view instructing the user to click the email verification link that was emailed to them by Laravel after registration. This view will be displayed to users when they try to access other parts of the application without verifying their email address first. Remember, the link is automatically emailed to the user as long as your App\Models\User
model implements the MustVerifyEmail
interface:
Route::get('/email/verify', function () {
return view('auth.verify-email');
})->middleware('auth')->name('verification.notice');
The route that returns the email verification notice should be named verification.notice
. It is important that the route is assigned this exact name since the verified
middleware included with Laravel will automatically redirect to this route name if a user has not verified their email address.
Note
When manually implementing email verification, you are required to define the contents of the verification notice view yourself. If you would like scaffolding that includes all necessary authentication and verification views, check out the Laravel application starter kits.
Next, we need to define a route that will handle requests generated when the user clicks the email verification link that was emailed to them. This route should be named verification.verify
and be assigned the auth
and signed
middlewares:
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\EmailVerificationRequest;
Route::get('/email/verify/{id}/{hash}', function (EmailVerificationRequest $request) {
$request->fulfill();
return redirect('/home');
})->middleware(['auth', 'signed'])->name('verification.verify');
Before moving on, let's take a closer look at this route. First, you'll notice we are using an EmailVerificationRequest
request type instead of the typical Illuminate\Http\Request
instance. The EmailVerificationRequest
is a form request that is included with Laravel. This request will automatically take care of validating the request's id
and hash
parameters.
Next, we can proceed directly to calling the fulfill
method on the request. This method will call the markEmailAsVerified
method on the authenticated user and dispatch the Illuminate\Auth\Events\Verified
event. The markEmailAsVerified
method is available to the default App\Models\User
model via the Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User
base class. Once the user's email address has been verified, you may redirect them wherever you wish.
Sometimes a user may misplace or accidentally delete the email address verification email. To accommodate this, you may wish to define a route to allow the user to request that the verification email be resent. You may then make a request to this route by placing a simple form submission button within your verification notice view:
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
Route::post('/email/verification-notification', function (Request $request) {
$request->user()->sendEmailVerificationNotification();
return back()->with('message', 'Verification link sent!');
})->middleware(['auth', 'throttle:6,1'])->name('verification.send');
Route middleware may be used to only allow verified users to access a given route. Laravel ships with a verified
middleware, which references the Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\EnsureEmailIsVerified
class. Since this middleware is already registered in your application's HTTP kernel, all you need to do is attach the middleware to a route definition. Typically, this middleware is paired with the auth
middleware:
Route::get('/profile', function () {
// Only verified users may access this route...
})->middleware(['auth', 'verified']);
If an unverified user attempts to access a route that has been assigned this middleware, they will automatically be redirected to the verification.notice
named route.
Although the default email verification notification should satisfy the requirements of most applications, Laravel allows you to customize how the email verification mail message is constructed.
To get started, pass a closure to the toMailUsing
method provided by the Illuminate\Auth\Notifications\VerifyEmail
notification. The closure will receive the notifiable model instance that is receiving the notification as well as the signed email verification URL that the user must visit to verify their email address. The closure should return an instance of Illuminate\Notifications\Messages\MailMessage
. Typically, you should call the toMailUsing
method from the boot
method of your application's App\Providers\AuthServiceProvider
class:
use Illuminate\Auth\Notifications\VerifyEmail;
use Illuminate\Notifications\Messages\MailMessage;
/**
* Register any authentication / authorization services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
// ...
VerifyEmail::toMailUsing(function ($notifiable, $url) {
return (new MailMessage)
->subject('Verify Email Address')
->line('Click the button below to verify your email address.')
->action('Verify Email Address', $url);
});
}
Note
To learn more about mail notifications, please consult the mail notification documentation.
When using the Laravel application starter kits, Laravel dispatches events during the email verification process. If you are manually handling email verification for your application, you may wish to manually dispatch these events after verification is completed. You may attach listeners to these events in your application's EventServiceProvider
:
use App\Listeners\LogVerifiedUser;
use Illuminate\Auth\Events\Verified;
/**
* The event listener mappings for the application.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $listen = [
Verified::class => [
LogVerifiedUser::class,
],
];
last update:2022-10-07 14:30