A Firebase project is the top-level entity for Firebase. In a project, you
can register your Apple, Android, or web apps. After you register your apps
with Firebase, you can add the
product-specific Firebase SDKs to your app, like
Analytics, Cloud Firestore, Crashlytics, or Remote Config.
You should register your Apple, Android, and web app variants within a
single Firebase project. You can use multiple Firebase projects to support
multiple environments, such as development, staging, and production.
Here are some resources for learning more about Firebase projects:
Understand Firebase projects —
provides brief overviews of several important concepts about Firebase
projects, including their relationship with Google Cloud and the basic
hierarchy of a project and its apps and resources.
General
best practices for setting up Firebase projects — provides general,
high-level best practices for setting up Firebase projects and registering
your apps with a project so that you have a clear development workflow
that uses distinct environments.
Note that for all Firebase projects, Firebase automatically adds a label of
firebase:enabled within the
Labels page for your project in the
Google Cloud console. Learn more about this label in our
FAQ.
What is a Google Cloud organization?
A Google Cloud organization is a container for Google Cloud projects
(including Firebase projects). This hierarchy enables better organization,
access management, and auditing of your Google Cloud and Firebase projects.
For more information, refer to
Creating and Managing Organizations.
How do I add Firebase to an existing Google Cloud project?
Why does my Google Cloud project have a label of
firebase:enabled?
In the
Labels page
for your project in the Google Cloud console, you may see a label of
firebase:enabled (specifically, a Key of
firebase with a Value of enabled).
Firebase automatically added this label because your project is a Firebase
project, which means that your project has Firebase-specific configurations
and services enabled for it. Learn more about the
relationship
between Firebase projects and Google Cloud.
We strongly recommend that you don't modify or delete this
label. This label is used by Firebase and Google Cloud to list your
Firebase projects (for example, using the
REST
API projects.list endpoint
or in menus within the Firebase console).
Be aware that manually adding this label to your list of project labels
does NOT enable Firebase-specific configurations and services for your
Google Cloud project. To do that, you need to add Firebase via the
Firebase console (or, for advanced use cases, via
the Firebase
Management REST API or the
Firebase CLI).
Why isn't my Firebase project showing up in my list of Firebase projects?
This FAQ is applicable if you don't see your Firebase project in the
following places:
In a list of projects that you're viewing within the Firebase console
In the response from running the Firebase CLI command
firebase projects:list
Try these troubleshooting steps:
First, try accessing your project by visiting the project's URL
directly. Use the following format: https://console.firebase.google.com/project/PROJECT-ID/overview
If you can't access the project or receive permissions errors, check the
following:
Make sure that you're signed into Firebase using the same Google
account that has access to the project. You can sign in and out of the
Firebase console via your account avatar in the top-right corner of
the console.
Make sure that your project has the label
firebase:enabled in the
Labels page for your project in the
Google Cloud console. Firebase and Google Cloud use this label to
list your Firebase projects. If you do not see this label but
the Firebase Management API is enabled for your project,
then manually add the label (specifically, a Key of
firebase with a Value of
enabled).
Make sure that you're assigned one of the
basic IAM roles (Owner,
Editor, Viewer) or a role that has Firebase-related permissions in it,
for example a
Firebase predefined
role. You can view your role(s) in the
IAM page of the Google Cloud console.
If your project belongs to a Google Cloud organization, you may
require additional permissions to see the project listed in the
Firebase console. Contact the person who manages your Google Cloud
organization to give you the appropriate role to view the project, for
example the Browser role.
If none of the troubleshooting steps above enable you to see your project
in a list of Firebase projects, contact
Firebase Support.
How many projects can I have per account?
Spark pricing plan — Your project quota is limited to a small
number of projects (usually around 5-10).
Blaze pricing plan — Your project quota per
Cloud Billing account increases substantially as long as your
Cloud Billing account is in good standing.
Note that the complete deletion of a project requires 30 days and counts
toward your quota until it is fully deleted.
How many Firebase Apps can I have in a Firebase project?
A Firebase project is a container for Firebase Apps across Apple, Android,
and web. Firebase restricts the total number of Firebase Apps within
a Firebase project to 30.
After this number, performance starts to degrade (especially for
Google Analytics) and eventually, at a higher number of apps, some
product functionality stops working. Additionally, if you use Google sign-in
as an authentication provider, an underlying OAuth 2.0 client ID is created
for each app in your project. There's a limit of around 30 client IDs that
can be created within a single project.
You should ensure that all Firebase Apps within a single Firebase project
are platform variants of the same application from an end-user perspective.
For example, if you develop a white label application, each independently
labeled app should have its own Firebase project, but the Apple and Android
versions of that label can be in the same project. Read more detailed
guidance in our
general best
practices for setting up Firebase projects.
In the rare case your project requires more than 30 apps, you can request
an app limit increase. Your project must be on the Blaze pricing plan to
make this request. Visit the Google Cloud console to
make your request and have it evaluated. Learn more
about
quota management in the Google Cloud documentation.
What happens if I tag my project as a "production" environment?
In the Firebase console, you can tag your Firebase projects with their
environment type, either as Production or Unspecified
(non-prod) environments.
Tagging your project as an environment type has no effect on how your
Firebase project works or its features. However, the tagging can help you
and your team manage your various Firebase projects for the app lifecycle.
If you tag your project as a production environment, we add a brightly
colored Prod tag to the project in the Firebase console, reminding
you that any changes could affect your associated production apps. In the
future, we might add more features and safeguards for Firebase projects
tagged as production environments.
To change the environment type of your Firebase project, go to
settingsProject settings > General, then in
the Your project card under Environment, click
edit to change the environment type.
Where can I find the App ID for my Firebase app?
In the Firebase console, go to your
settingsProject settings. Scroll down to the
Your apps card, then click on the desired Firebase App to view the
app's information, including its App ID.
Either of the following Firebase roles: Owner or Firebase Admin and
Either of the following Google Play access levels: account Owner or Admin
For linking your AdMob app, you need to be
both a Firebase project owner and an AdMob administrator.
For linking your AdWords account, you need to
be both a Firebase project owner and an AdWords administrator.
For linking your BigQuery project, you need to
be the Firebase project owner.
What open source notices should I include in my app?
On Apple platforms, the Firebase pod contains a NOTICES file which includes
the relevant entries. The Firebase Android SDK contains a
helper Activity for showing license
information.
Permissions and access to Firebase projects
How do I assign a project member a role, like the Owner role?
To manage the role(s) assigned to each project member, you must be an Owner of the Firebase
project (or be assigned a role with the permission
resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicy).
Here are the places where you can assign and manage roles:
The Google Cloud console offers an expansive set of tools to assign roles to project members
in the
IAM page. In the Cloud console, you can also create
and manage
custom roles, as well as give service accounts
access to your project.
Note that in the Google Cloud console, project members are called principals.
If the Owner of your project can no longer perform the tasks of an Owner (for example, the person
left your company) and your project isn't managed via a Google Cloud organization (see next
paragraph), you can
contact Firebase Support
and check with them about how to request access to the Firebase project.
Note that if a Firebase project is part of a Google Cloud organization, it may not have an Owner.
If you're unable to find an Owner for your Firebase project, contact the person who manages your
Google Cloud organization to assign an Owner for the project.
How do I find the Owner of a Firebase project?
You can view project members and their roles in the following places:
If you have access to the project in the Firebase console, you can
view the list of project members, including Owners, in the
Users and permissions page
of the Firebase console.
If you do not have access to the project in the
Firebase console, check if you have access to the project in the
Google Cloud console. You can view the list of project members, including
Owners, in the
IAM page of the Google Cloud console.
If the Owner of your project can no longer perform the tasks of an Owner
(for example, the person left your company) and your project isn't managed
via a Google Cloud organization (see next paragraph), you can
contact
Firebase Support to have a temporary Owner assigned.
Note that if a Firebase project is part of a Google Cloud organization, it
may not have an Owner. Instead, the person who manages your Google Cloud
organization can perform many tasks that an Owner can do. However, to
perform several Owner-specific tasks (like assigning roles or managing
Google Analytics properties), the administrator may need to assign
themselves the actual Owner role
to perform those tasks. If you're unable to find an Owner for your Firebase
project, contact the person who manages your Google Cloud organization to
assign an Owner for the project.
Why or when should I assign a project member the Owner role?
To ensure proper management of a Firebase project, it must have an
Owner. A project's Owner is the person who can
perform several important administrative actions (like
assigning roles and managing Google Analytics properties), and
Firebase Support can only fulfill administrative requests from demonstrated
project Owners.
After you set up the Owner(s) for a Firebase project, it's important to
keep those assignments up-to-date.
Note that if a Firebase project is part of a Google Cloud organization, the
person who manages your Google Cloud organization can perform many tasks
that an Owner can do. However, for several Owner-specific tasks (like
assigning roles or managing Google Analytics properties), the
administrator may need to assign themselves the
actual Owner role to perform
those tasks.
I don't think that I have a Firebase project, but I got an email about
one. How do I access this project?
The email you received should contain a link to open your Firebase project.
Clicking the link in the email should open the project in the
Firebase console.
If you're not able to open the project in the link, make sure that you're
signed into Firebase using the same Google account that received the email
about the project. You can sign in and out of the Firebase console via
your account avatar in the top-right corner of the console.
Note that if you're the administrator of a Google Cloud organization, you
may be notified about changes to Firebase projects inside your organization.
However, you may not have sufficient permissions to open the Firebase
project. In these cases, the simplest solution is to assign yourself the
actual Owner role to open the
project and perform the required actions. Learn more about
why and when to assign the
Owner role.
Platforms and frameworks
Visit the platform-specific troubleshooting & FAQ pages for helpful tips and
answers for more FAQ.
What are the supported browsers for accessing the Firebase console?
The Firebase console can be accessed from recent versions of
popular desktop browsers such as Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Edge.
Mobile browsers are currently not fully supported.
I can load the Firebase console, but why can't I find or access my
Firebase project?
This FAQ is applicable if you're experiencing either of the following
issues:
The Firebase console returns an error page that says your project
may not exist or that you don't have access to the project.
The Firebase console doesn't display your project even when you enter
its project ID or project name in the console's search field.
Try these troubleshooting steps:
First, try accessing your project by visiting the project's URL
directly. Use the following format: https://console.firebase.google.com/project/PROJECT-ID/overview
If you still can't access the project or receive permissions errors,
check the following:
Make sure that you're signed into Firebase using the same Google account
that has access to the project. You can sign in and out of the
Firebase console via your account avatar in the top-right corner of
the console.
Make sure that you're assigned one of the
basic IAM roles (Owner,
Editor, Viewer) or a role that has Firebase-related permissions in it, for
example a
Firebase predefined
role. You can view your role(s) in the
IAM page of the Google Cloud console.
If your project belongs to a Google Cloud organization, you may require
additional permissions to see the project listed in the
Firebase console. Contact the person who manages your Google Cloud
organization to give you the appropriate role to view the project, for
example the Browser role.
If none of the troubleshooting steps above enable you to find or access
your project, contact
Firebase Support.
Why is the Firebase console not loading for me?
This FAQ is applicable if you're experiencing any of the following issues:
A page in the Firebase console never finishes loading.
Data within a page doesn't load as expected.
You receive browser error messages when loading the Firebase console.
The Firebase console supports the following languages:
English
Brazilian Portuguese
French
German
Indonesian
Japanese
Korean
Russian
Simplified Chinese
Spanish
Traditional Chinese
What roles and permissions does the Firebase console support?
The Firebase console and Google Cloud console use the same
underlying roles and permissions. Learn more about roles and permissions in
the Firebase IAM documentation.
A project Owner can add other members to the project,
set up
integrations
(project linking to services like BigQuery or Slack), and has
full edit access for the project.
A project Editor has full edit access for the project.
A project Viewer has only read access for the project.
Note that the Firebase console currently does not hide/disable
edit UI controls from project Viewers, but these operations will fail for
project members assigned the Viewer role.
Firebase also supports:
Firebase predefined roles
— Curated Firebase-specific roles that enable more granular access
control than the basic roles of Owner, Editor, and Viewer.
Custom roles
— Fully customized IAM roles that you create to tailor a set of
permissions that meet the specific requirements of your organization.
Pricing
Which products are paid? Which are no-cost?
Firebase's paid infrastructure products are the Realtime Database,
Cloud Storage for Firebase, Cloud Functions, Hosting,
Test Lab, and phone authentication. We offer a no-cost tier for all of
these features.
Firebase also has many no-cost products:
Analytics, Cloud Messaging, the Notifications composer,
Remote Config, App Indexing, Dynamic Links, and
Crash Reporting. Use of these products is subject only to the product's
traffic control policies (e.g. quotas, fair access and other service
protections) in all plans, including our no-cost Spark
plan. In addition, all Authentication features beyond phone
authentication are no-cost.
Does Firebase offer no-cost trial credits for paid products?
Firebase paid services can be used under the Google Cloud
Free Trial.
New Google Cloud and Firebase users can take advantage of a 90-day trial period
that includes $300 in free Cloud Billing credits to explore and evaluate
Google Cloud and Firebase products and services.
During the Google Cloud Free Trial period, you'll be provided a Free Trial
Cloud Billing account. Any Firebase project that uses that billing account
will be on the Blaze pricing plan during the free trial period.
Don't worry, setting up this Free Trial Cloud Billing account does not enable
us to charge you. You are not charged unless you explicitly enable billing by
upgrading your Free Trial Cloud Billing account to a paid account. You can
upgrade to a paid account at any time during the trial. After you've upgraded,
you can still use any remaining credits (within the 90-day period).
Once the free trial expires, you'll need to either downgrade your project to the
Spark pricing plan or set up the Blaze pricing
plan
in the Firebase console to continue using your Firebase project.
Our Spark plan is a great place to develop your app at no cost. You get all
the no-cost Firebase features (Analytics, the Notifications composer,
Crashlytics, and so on) and generous amounts of our paid
infrastructure features. However, if you exceed your Spark plan
resources in a calendar month, your app will be shut off for the
remainder of that month. In addition, Google Cloud features are not
available when using the Spark plan.
Blaze pricing plan
Our Blaze plan is designed for production apps. The
Blaze plan also allows you to extend your app with paid Google Cloud
features. You pay only for the resources that you
consume, allowing you to scale with demand. We strive to make our
Blaze plan prices competitive with industry-leading cloud
providers.
What happened to the free SMS on the Spark plan?
Starting September 2024, to improve the security and service quality of
Phone Authentication, Firebase projects must be linked to a Cloud Billing
account to enable and use the SMS Service.
How can I monitor my usage and billing?
You can track your usage of project resources in the Firebase console on
any of the following dashboards:
In January 2020, the Flame pricing plan ($25/mo of additional quota) was
removed as an option for new sign-ups. Existing plan users were granted a
grace period to migrate their projects off the Flame plan.
In February 2022, the remaining projects on the Flame pricing plan were
downgraded to the Spark pricing plan.
Accordingly,
Existing Spark and Blaze plan projects and any new projects can no
longer switch to or sign up for the Flame plan.
If you moved an existing Flame plan project to a different pricing plan,
the project cannot return to the Flame plan.
Projects downgraded to the Spark plan can be upgraded to the
Blaze plan to resume additional paid services.
References to the Flame plan have been removed from documentation.
Do you have more questions about the Flame plan retirement? Read some of the
additional FAQs below.
Want to learn about the other pricing plans offered by Firebase? Visit our
Firebase pricing page! If you'd like to start
moving any existing projects to another pricing plan, you can do that in
the
Firebase console for your project.
Additional FAQs about the Flame plan retirement
I have a project or a process or a business model that relies on a fixed
Firebase cost. What should I do?
Sign up for the Blaze pricing plan, and make sure to
set
budget alerts.
May I be given special access to create new Flame plan projects?
No, Firebase isn't offering special access for projects to switch to or
sign-up for the Flame plan.
I changed my Flame plan project to a different pricing plan. How do I
change it back?
Switching to the Flame plan is no longer possible. For access to services
provided by the Flame plan, make sure that you're using the Blaze
pricing plan, and consider
setting
up budget alerts for your project.
My project was automatically switched to a different pricing plan as part
of the Flame plan retirement. What should I do?
If your project requires additional quota beyond what is provided with the
Spark plan, you'll need to upgrade your project to the Blaze pricing plan.
Why is the Flame plan being retired?
Over the years, we've seen declining usage of the Flame plan, and most
projects that use the plan are not consuming its full value. Maintaining
this pricing plan is generally not cost-effective, and we feel that we can
serve everyone better if resources went to other Firebase initiatives.
How is the no-cost usage in the Blaze plan different from the no-cost usage
in the Spark plan?
No-cost usage on the Blaze plan is calculated daily. Usage limits
also differ from the Spark plan for Cloud Functions, phone
authentication, and Test Lab.
For Cloud Functions, no-cost usage on the Blaze plan is
calculated at the Cloud Billing account level, not the project level
and has the following limits:
2M invocations/month
400K GB-seconds/month
200K CPU-seconds/month
5 GB of networking egress/month
For phone authentication, no-cost usage on the Blaze plan is calculated
monthly.
For Test Lab, no-cost usage on the Blaze plan has the following
limits:
30 physical device minutes/day
60 virtual device minutes/day
Does the no-cost usage quota reset when I change from a Spark to a Blaze
plan?
No-cost usage from the Spark plan is included in the Blaze plan.
No-cost usage does not reset when moving to a Blaze plan.
What is a "simultaneous database connection"?
A simultaneous connection is equivalent to one mobile device,
browser tab, or server app connected to the database. Firebase
imposes hard limits on the number of simultaneous
connections to your app's database. These limits are in place to
protect both Firebase and our users from abuse.
The Spark plan limit is 100 and cannot be raised. The Flame and
Blaze plans have a limit of 200,000 simultaneous connections per
database.
This limit isn't the same as the total number of users of your
app, because your users don't all connect at once. If you need
more than 200,000 simultaneous connections, please read
Scale with Multiple Databases.
What happens if I exceed Spark plan storage or download limits for
Realtime Database?
To provide you with a predictable price, the resources
available to you in the Spark plans are capped. This
means
that when you exceed any plan limit in any month, your app will be
turned off to prevent any further resource usage and additional
charges.
What happens if I exceed Spark plan simultaneous connection limits for
Realtime Database?
When your app reaches its concurrency limit on the Spark plan, any
subsequent connections will be rejected until some of the existing
connections are closed. The app will continue to work for users
who are connected.
How does Firebase's integration with Google Cloud work?
Firebase is deeply integrated with
Google Cloud.
Projects are shared between Firebase and Google Cloud, so projects can
have Firebase services and Google Cloud services enabled. You can access
the same project from the Firebase console or the Google Cloud console.
Specifically:
Certain Firebase products are backed directly by Google Cloud, such as
Cloud Storage for Firebase. The list of products backed by Google Cloud
will continue to grow over time.
Many of your settings, including collaborators and billing
information, are shared by Firebase and Google Cloud.
Your usage of both Firebase and Google Cloud appears on
the same bill.
In addition, when you upgrade to the Blaze plan,
you can use any of Google Cloud's world-class
Infrastructure-as-a-Service and APIs directly inside
your Firebase project, at standard
Google Cloud pricing.
You can
also export data from Google Cloud directly to
BigQuery for analysis. To learn more, see
Link BigQuery with Firebase.
There are many security-enhancing, latency-improving, and time-saving
benefits to using Google Cloud with Firebase (versus other, cloud
services that are not co-located). Check out the
Google Cloud site for more details.
What happens to my Firebase project if I add or remove billing accounts for
that project in the Google Cloud console?
If a Cloud Billing account is added to a project in the
Google Cloud console, the same project will automatically be upgraded to
the Firebase Blaze plan if that project is currently on the Spark plan.
In contrast, if an existing active Cloud Billing account is removed from
a project in the Google Cloud console, that project will be downgraded to
the Firebase Spark plan.
Can I upgrade, downgrade, or cancel at any time?
Yes, you can upgrade, downgrade, or cancel at any time. Note that
we don't provide prorated refunds for downgrades or cancellations.
This means that if you downgrade or cancel before the end of your
billing period, you still pay for the remainder of the month.
What kind of support will I receive?
All Firebase apps, including those using no-cost plans, come with email
support from Firebase staff during US Pacific business hours. All accounts
have unlimited support for billing-related issues,
account-related issues, technical (troubleshooting) questions, and
incident reports.
Can I cap usage on the Blaze plan?
No, you cannot currently cap your Blaze plan usage. We are
evaluating options for supporting caps on Blaze plan usage.
Blaze users can define a budget for their project or account,
and receive alerts as their spending approaches those limits.
Learn how to
set
up budget alerts.
What are automated backups? Do you offer hourly backups?
Automated backups are an advanced
feature for customers on our Blaze pricing plan that backs up your
Firebase Realtime Database data once a day and uploads it to
Google Cloud Storage.
We do not offer hourly backups.
Do you offer open-source, nonprofit, or educational discounts?
Our Spark plan can be used by any type of individual or
organization, including nonprofits, schools, and open-source
projects. Since these plans already include generous quotas, we
don't offer any special discounts or plans for open-source,
nonprofit, or educational projects.
Do you offer enterprise contracts, pricing, support, or dedicated
infrastructure hosting?
Our Blaze plan is suitable for enterprises of all sizes, and our
SLA
meets or exceeds the industry standard for cloud infrastructure.
However, we do not currently offer enterprise contracts, pricing,
or support, nor do we offer dedicated infrastructure hosting
(that is, on-premises installations) for services like our
Realtime Database. We are hard at work adding some of these features.
Do you offer ad-hoc pricing? I only want pay-as-you-go for one or two
features.
We offer ad-hoc pricing in the Blaze plan, where you pay only for
the features you use.
How do the paid Firebase plans work with Ads? Are there no-cost
advertising credits with paid plans?
The Firebase pricing plans are separate from Ads, so
there are no advertising credits without cost. As a Firebase developer,
you are able to "link" your Ads account to Firebase to
support conversion tracking.
All ads campaigns are managed directly in Ads, and
Ads billing is managed from the Ads console.
Cloud Functions pricing
Why do I need a billing account to use
Cloud Functions for Firebase?
Cloud Functions for Firebase relies on some paid Google services. New
function deployments with Firebase CLI 11.2.0 and higher rely on
Cloud Build and
Artifact Registry.
Deployments to older versions use Cloud Build in the same way, but rely on
Container Registry and
Cloud Storage for storage
instead of Artifact Registry. Usage of these services will be billed in addition to
existing pricing.
Storage space for Firebase CLI 11.2.0 and newer versions
Artifact Registry
provides the containers in which functions run. Artifact Registry
provides the first 500MB at no cost, so your first function deployments may
not incur any fees. Above that threshold, each additional GB of storage is
billed at $0.10 per month.
Storage space for Firebase CLI 11.1.x and prior versions
For functions deployed to older versions,
Container Registry,
provides the containers in which functions run. You'll be
billed for each container required to deploy a function. You may notice small
charges for each container stored—for example, 1GB of storage is
billed at $0.026 per month.
To understand more about how your bill might change, please review the following
Does Cloud Functions for Firebase
still have no-cost usage?
Yes. On the Blaze plan, Cloud Functions provides a no-cost tier
for invocations, compute time, and internet traffic. The
first 2,000,000 invocations, 400,000 GB-sec, 200,000 CPU-sec, and 5 GB of
Internet egress traffic is provided at no cost each month. You'll be charged
only for usage above those thresholds.
After the first 500MB of no-cost storage, each deployment operation will incur
small-scale charges for the storage space used for the function's container. If
your development process depends on deploying functions for testing, you can
further minimize costs by using the
Firebase Local Emulator Suite during development.
Is Firebase planning to raise the
quotas and limits for Cloud Functions for Firebase?
No. There are no plans to change the quotas except for the removal of a maximum
build time limit; instead of receiving errors or warnings when the daily build
quota of 120 minutes is reached, you'll be billed under the terms of the Blaze
pricing plan. See Quotas and limits.
Can I get the Google Cloud
$300 credit?
Yes, you can create a Cloud Billing account in the Google Cloud console to
get the $300 credit, then link that Cloud Billing account to a Firebase
project.
Note that if you do this, you have to then set up
the Blaze pricing plan in the Firebase console in order
for your project to continue working after the $300 credit is exhausted.
I want to follow a codelab to
learn about Firebase. Can you give me a temporary billing account?
No, sorry. You can use the
Firebase emulator for development
without having a Cloud Billing account. Alternatively, try applying for a
Google Cloud free trial.
If you're still having trouble paying your
bill because of this change, contact Firebase Support.
I'm worried I'm going to rack up a
huge bill.
You can
set up budget alerts
in the Google Cloud console to help control costs. Also, you can
set limits on
the number of billed instances created for each of your functions.
To get an idea of costing for typical scenarios, see the
Cloud Functions Pricing
examples.
To use extensions, you will need to upgrade to the
Blaze pricing plan. You will be charged a small amount (typically
around $0.01 per month
for the Firebase resources required by each extension you install (even if they
are not used), in addition to any charges associated with your use of Firebase
services.
Cloud Storage for Firebase pricing
How do I predict how much I will be billed for upload and download
operations?
Visit the Firebase Pricing page and use the
Blaze plan calculator.
The calculator lists all the usage types for Cloud Storage for Firebase.
Use the sliders to input the expected usage of your Storage bucket. The
calculator will estimate your monthly bill.
What happens if I exceed Spark plan upload, download or storage
limits for Cloud Storage for Firebase?
When you exceed limits for Cloud Storage in a
project on the Spark plan, the result depends on the
type of limit that you exceed:
If you exceed the GB stored limit, you will
not be able to store any more data in that project unless you
remove some of the data stored or upgrade to a plan that provides
more storage space, or unlimited storage space.
If you exceed the GB downloaded limit, your
app will not be able to download more data until the next day
(starting at midnight, US Pacific Time), unless you upgrade to a
plan with less restrictive limits, or with no limits.
If you exceed the upload or download operations
limit, your app will not be able to upload or download more data
until the next day (starting at midnight, US Pacific Time), unless
you upgrade to a plan with less restrictive limits, or with no
limits.
Privacy
Where can I find information about privacy and security in Firebase?
Do the Firebase SDKs log any usage/diagnostic information outside of
Analytics?
Yes. This is currently iOS-only, but may change in the future. The Firebase
Apple platforms SDK includes the FirebaseCoreDiagnostics
framework by default. This framework is used by Firebase to collect SDK
usage and diagnostics information to help prioritize future product
enhancements. FirebaseCoreDiagnostics is optional, so if you
would like to opt out of sending Firebase diagnostic logs, you can do so by
unlinking the library from your application. You can browse the full source,
including logged values, on
GitHub
A/B Testing
A/B Testing: How many experiments can I create and run?
You are allowed up to 300 experiments per project,
which could consist of up to 24 running experiments, with the rest as draft or completed.
A/B Testing: Why can’t I view my experiments after
unlinking and re-linking my project to Google Analytics?
Linking to a different Google Analytics property will cause you to lose access to experiments created beforehand. To regain access to a previous experiment, re-link your project to the Google Analytics property that was linked when the experiment was created.
A/B Testing: Why do I receive a "Project not linked to
Google Analytics" message when creating a Remote Config experiment?
If you've already
linked Firebase and Google Analytics, but still see a message that Google
Analytics is not linked, make sure that an Analytics stream exists for all apps in your
project. Currently, all apps in a project must be connected to a Google Analytics stream to use
A/B Testing.
You can find the list of all active streams on the
Google Analytics integration details
page within the Firebase console, accessed from
settingsProject Settingschevron_rightIntegrationschevron_rightGoogle Analyticschevron_rightManage.
Creating a Google Analytics stream for any app that does not have one should resolve the issue.
There are a few ways to create streams for missing apps:
If you only have one or two apps missing an associated Google Analytics stream, you can choose
one of the following methods to add a Google Analytics stream:
Delete and re-add any app without an active stream in the Firebase console.
From the
Google Analytics console, select
Admin, click Data Streams, then click
Add stream, add the missing app's details, and click Register
app.
If you have more than a few missing app streams, unlinking and relinking your Google Analytics
property is the fastest and most efficient way to create the missing app streams:
From settingsProject Settings, select
Integrations.
Within the Google Analytics card, click Manage to access
Firebase and Google Analytics settings.
Make a note of the Google Analytics Property ID and the
Linked Google Analytics account.
Click more_vertMore and select
Unlink Analytics from this project.
Review the warning that appears (don't worry here; you will relink the same property in the
next step), then click
Unlink Google Analytics.
When unlinking is complete, you'll be redirected to the Integrations page.
Within the Google Analytics card, click Enable to begin
the relinking process.
Select your Analytics account from the Select account list.
Next to Automatically create a new property in this account, click
editEdit and, from the
Analytics property list that appears, select your property ID.
A list of all apps in your project appears. Existing stream mappings for each app are
listed, and apps that do not have a stream will have one created for them.
Click Enable Google Analytics to relink the property.
To use AdMob, always use the Google Mobile Ads SDK as described in
this FAQ. Additionally and optionally, if you want to collect user metrics
for AdMob, then include the Firebase SDK for Google Analytics
in your app.
For Android projects:
Add the dependency for the Google Mobile Ads SDK to your
build.gradle file: implementation 'com.google.android.gms:play-services-ads:23.5.0'
Analytics: Why is Google Analytics a recommended part
of using Firebase products?
Google Analytics is a free and unlimited analytics solution that
works with Firebase features to deliver powerful insights. It enables you to
view event logs in Crashlytics, notification effectiveness in
FCM, deep link performance for Dynamic Links, and in-app purchase data
from Google Play. It powers advanced audience targeting in
Remote Config, Remote Config personalization, and more.
Google Analytics acts as a layer of intelligence in the
Firebase console to provide you with more actionable insights about how
to develop a high quality app, grow your user base, and earn more money.
Analytics: How do I control how my Analytics data
is shared with the rest of Firebase?
By default, your Google Analytics data is used to enhance other
Firebase and Google features. You can control how your
Google Analytics data is shared in your project settings anytime.
Learn more about
Data sharing settings.
Analytics: How do I update my Analytics property
settings?
From the Admin page
in your Google Analytics property, you can update your property settings,
such as:
Data sharing settings
Data retention settings
Time zone and currency settings
To update your property settings, follow these steps:
In the Firebase console, go to your
settings >
Project settings.
Go to the Integrations tab, and then in the Google Analytics
card, click Manage or View link.
Analytics: Why don't I see any Analytics data in
the Firebase console after unlinking Firebase from Google Analytics?
Analytics data resides within the Google Analytics property — not
within the Firebase project. If you delete or unlink the property, then the
Analytics data will not be accessible to Firebase and you'll see an
empty Analytics dashboard in the Firebase console. Note that
since the data still resides in the previously linked property, you can
always relink the property to Firebase and see the Analytics data in the
Firebase console.
Linking a brand new Google Analytics account (and thus a new
Google Analytics property) to your Firebase project will result in an empty
Analytics dashboard in the Firebase console. However, if your
previously linked property still exists, then you can move the existing data
from the old property to the new property.
Analytics: If my Analytics property and its data
were deleted, is there any way to get them back?
No. If your property has been deleted, it isn't possible to undelete the
property or retrieve the previously collected Analytics data stored in
that property.
If you'd like to start using Google Analytics again, you can link either a
new property or an existing property to your Firebase project. You can do
this linking in either the Firebase console or the Google Analytics UI.
Learn more about
linking a Google Analytics property to your
Firebase project.
Analytics: If my Analytics property was deleted, can I
link a new Google Analytics property to my Firebase project and start using
Analytics again?
If you'd like to start using Google Analytics again, you can link either a
new property or an existing property to your Firebase project. You can do
this linking in either the Firebase console or the Google Analytics UI.
Learn more about
linking a Google Analytics property to your
Firebase project.
Note that since all Analytics data is stored in the property (not the
Firebase project), the previously collected Analytics data cannot be
retrieved.
Analytics: How will Firebase products or integrated
Google products be affected by the deletion of my Analytics property?
Several Firebase products rely on the Google Analytics integration. If your
Analytics property and its data are deleted, the following will happen if
you use the following products:
Crashlytics — You can no longer see crash-free users, breadcrumb
logs, and/or velocity alerts.
Cloud Messaging and In-App Messaging — You can no longer use
targeting, campaign metrics, audience segmentation, and analytics labels.
Remote Config — You can no longer use targeted configurations or
Personalization.
A/B Testing — You can no longer use A/B Testing since the
experiment measurement is supplied by Google Analytics.
Dynamic Links — Any feature that relies on data from Google Analytics will be
disrupted.
In addition, the following integrations will be affected:
Analytics: How do I segment users who have
not met some criterion?
You can reframe the problem by "negatively targeting" these users. For
example, reframe the problem as "Don't show ads to people who have bought
something", and form an
audience of those users to target.
Analytics: Are audiences and/or events defined in the
Google Analytics interface also available in the Firebase console?
Your audiences and user properties will be synced. For some features,
you'll need to use the Google Analytics interface, such as segmentation and
closed funnels. You can access the Google Analytics interface directly via
deep-links from the Firebase console.
Any changes you make from the Firebase console can also be performed in
Google Analytics, and those changes will be reflected in Firebase.
Authentication
Firebase Authentication: Which regions are supported for phone
authentication?
Firebase Authentication supports phone number verification globally, but not all networks reliably deliver verification
messages. The following regions have good rates of delivery, and
should be expected to work well for phone authentication. Where noted, some carriers are unavailable in a region due to poor delivery success rates.
Region
Code
AD
Andorra
AE
United Arab Emirates
AF
Afghanistan
AG
Antigua and Barbuda
AL
Albania
AM
Armenia
AO
Angola
AR
Argentina
AS
American Samoa
AT
Austria
AU
Australia
AW
Aruba
AZ
Azerbaijan
BA
Bosnia and Herzegovina
BB
Barbados
BD
Bangladesh
BE
Belgium
BF
Burkina Faso
BG
Bulgaria
BJ
Benin
BM
Bermuda
BN
Brunei Darussalam
BO
Bolivia
BR
Brazil
BS
Bahamas
BT
Bhutan
BW
Botswana
BY
Belarus
BZ
Belize
CA
Canada
CD
Congo, (Kinshasa)
CF
Central African Republic
CG
Congo (Brazzaville)
CH
Switzerland
CI
Côte d'Ivoire
CK
Cook Islands
CL
Chile
CM
Cameroon
CO
Colombia
CR
Costa Rica
CV
Cape Verde
CW
Curaçao
CY
Cyprus
CZ
Czech Republic
DE
Germany
DJ
Djibouti
DK
Denmark
DM
Dominica
DO
Dominican Republic
DZ
Algeria
EC
Ecuador
EG
Egypt
ES
Spain
ET
Ethiopia
FI
Finland
FJ
Fiji
FK
Falkland Islands (Malvinas)
FM
Micronesia, Federated States of
FO
Faroe Islands
FR
France
GA
Gabon
GB
United Kingdom
GD
Grenada
GE
Georgia
GF
French Guiana
GG
Guernsey
GH
Ghana
GI
Gibraltar
GL
Greenland
GM
Gambia
GP
Guadeloupe
GQ
Equatorial Guinea
GR
Greece
GT
Guatemala
GY
Guyana
HK
Hong Kong, SAR China
HN
Honduras
HR
Croatia
HT
Haiti
HU
Hungary
ID
Indonesia
IE
Ireland
IL
Israel
IM
Isle of Man
IN
India
IQ
Iraq
IT
Italy
JE
Jersey
JM
Jamaica
JO
Jordan
JP
Japan
KE
Kenya
KG
Kyrgyzstan
KH
Cambodia
KM
Comoros
KN
Saint Kitts and Nevis
KR
Korea (South)
KW
Kuwait
KY
Cayman Islands
KZ
Kazakhstan
LA
Lao PDR
LB
Lebanon
LC
Saint Lucia
LI
Liechtenstein
LK
Sri Lanka
LS
Lesotho
LT
Lithuania
LU
Luxembourg
LV
Latvia
LY
Libya
MA
Morocco
MD
Moldova
ME
Montenegro
MF
Saint-Martin (French part)
MG
Madagascar
MK
Macedonia, Republic of
MM
Myanmar
MN
Mongolia
MO
Macao, SAR China
MS
Montserrat
MT
Malta
MU
Mauritius
MW
Malawi
MX
Mexico
MY
Malaysia
MZ
Mozambique
NA
Namibia
NC
New Caledonia
NE
Niger
NF
Norfolk Island
NG
Nigeria
NI
Nicaragua
NL
Netherlands
NO
Norway
NP
Nepal
NZ
New Zealand
OM
Oman
PA
Panama
PE
Peru
PG
Papua New Guinea
PH
Philippines
PK
Pakistan
PL
Poland
PM
Saint Pierre and Miquelon
PR
Puerto Rico
PS
Palestinian Territory
PT
Portugal
PY
Paraguay
QA
Qatar
RE
Réunion
RO
Romania
RS
Serbia
RU
Russian Federation
RW
Rwanda
SA
Saudi Arabia
SC
Seychelles
SE
Sweden
SG
Singapore
SH
Saint Helena
SI
Slovenia
SK
Slovakia
SL
Sierra Leone
SN
Senegal
SR
Suriname
ST
Sao Tome and Principe
SV
El Salvador
SZ
Swaziland
TC
Turks and Caicos Islands
TG
Togo
TH
Thailand
TL
Timor-Leste
TM
Turkmenistan
TO
Tonga
TR
Turkey
TT
Trinidad and Tobago
TW
Taiwan, Republic of China
TZ
Tanzania, United Republic of
UA
Ukraine
UG
Uganda
US
United States of America
UY
Uruguay
UZ
Uzbekistan
VC
Saint Vincent and Grenadines
VE
Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic)
VG
British Virgin Islands
VI
Virgin Islands, US
VN
Viet Nam
WS
Samoa
YE
Yemen
YT
Mayotte
ZA
South Africa
ZM
Zambia
ZW
Zimbabwe
Firebase Authentication: How can I prevent SMS abuse when using
phone authentication?
To help protect your project from SMS traffic pumping and API abuse, take the
following steps:
Look for regions with a very high number of sent SMS and a very low number
(or zero) of verified SMS. The ratio of verified/sent is your success rate.
Healthy success rates are commonly in the 70-85% range since SMS is not a
guaranteed delivery protocol, and some regions may experience abuse. Success
rates below 50% imply many sent SMS but few successful logins, which is a
common indicator of bad actors and SMS traffic pumping.
Use SMS Region Policy
to either deny SMS regions with low success rates, or only allow certain
regions if your app is only intended for distribution in certain markets.
Limit your authorized authentication domains
Use the
Authentication settings dashboard
to manage authorized domains. The localhost domain is added by default to the
approved authentication domains to simplify development. Consider removing
localhost from the authorized domains in your production project to
prevent bad actors from running code on theirlocalhost to access your
production project.
Enable and enforce App Check
Enable App Check to help protect your project from API abuse
by attesting that requests only come from applications associated with your
project.
Remember that you need to enforce App Check for Authentication in the
Firebase console
(consider monitoring traffic before
enforcing). Also, double check your
reCAPTCHA Enterprise
approved sites list to validate that it only contains your production sites, and
that the list of applications registered to your project in App Check is
accurate.
Note that App Check helps protect against automated attacks by asserting that
the call comes from one of your registered applications. It does not prevent
users from using your app in unintended ways (for example, starting then never
finishing login flows to generate sent SMS).
Firebase Authentication: Are phone numbers ported to a new carrier supported by phone authentication?
At this time, numbers ported between carriers will result in all SMS becoming undeliverable for those end users. There is no workaround, and Firebase is working on this issue.
Firebase Authentication: In my Android app, why am I getting the
following error: Google sign in failed?
Follow the troubleshooting steps in this FAQ if you're getting the following
error:
GoogleFragment: Google sign in failed
com.google.android.gms.common.api.ApiException: 13: Unable to get token.
at
com.google.android.gms.internal.auth-api.zbay.getSignInCredentialFromIntent(com.google.android.gms:play-services-auth@@20.3.0:6)
Make sure that Google sign-in is properly enabled as an authentication
provider:
Within the Sign in method tab, disable and then re-enable the
Google sign-in method (even if it's already enabled):
Open the Google sign-in method, disable it, and then click
Save.
Re-open the Google sign-in method, enable it, and then click
Save.
Also, in the Google sign-in provider configuration of the Authentication
section, make sure that the OAuth client ID and secret match the web client
displayed in the
Credentials
page of the Google Cloud console (look in the OAuth 2.0 Client IDs
section).
Firebase Authentication: In my web app, why are sign-in with redirects failing
with the following error: This domain YOUR_REDIRECT_DOMAIN is not
authorized to run this operation?
Follow the troubleshooting steps in this FAQ if you're getting the following
error:
This domain YOUR_REDIRECT_DOMAIN is not authorized to run this operation.
This error is most likely caused because your redirect domain isn't listed as a
authorized domain for Firebase Authentication, or the API key that you
use with the Firebase Authentication Service is invalid.
First make sure that YOUR_REDIRECT_DOMAIN is in the
list of authorized domains
for your Firebase project. If your redirect domain is already listed there,
continue to troubleshoot an invalid API key.
By default, Firebase Authentication JS SDK relies on the API key for your Firebase
project that's labeled as the Browser key, and it uses this key to verify that
a sign-in redirect URL is valid according to the list of authorized domains.
Authentication gets this API key depending on how you access the Authentication SDK:
If you use Hosting-provided Auth helpers
to log users in with the Authentication JS SDK, then Firebase automatically
obtains your API key with the rest of your Firebase configuration each time
you deploy to Firebase Hosting. Make sure that the authDomain in your
web app firebaseConfig is properly
configured to use
one of the domains for that Hosting site. You can verify this by going
to https://authDomain__/firebase/init.json,
and checking that the projectId matches that from your firebaseConfig.
If you self-host the sign-in
code, then
you can use a __/firebase/init.json file to provide the Firebase
configuration to the self-hosted Authentication JS SDK Redirect helper. The API
key and the projectId listed in this config file should match your web
app firebaseConfig.
Check to make sure this API key hasn't been deleted: Go to the
APIs & Services > Credentials
panel in the Google Cloud console where all the API keys for your
project are listed.
If the Browser key has not been deleted, check the following:
If you self-host the sign-in code, make sure the API key listed in your
__/firebase/init.json file matches the API key in the Cloud console.
Correct the key in the file, if necessary, then redeploy your app.
If the Browser key has been deleted, you can have Firebase generate a
new API key for you: In the Firebase console, go to
settings > Project settings, then in the Your apps section, click on your web app. This action
automatically creates an API key that you can see in the
SDK setup and configuration section for your web app.
Note that in the Cloud console this new API key will not be called Browser
key; instead, it will be the same name as your Firebase Web App's nickname.
If you decide to
add API restrictions
to this new API key, make sure the Firebase Authentication API is in the list of
allowed APIs.
Once your new API key is created, complete the applicable steps below:
If you use reserved Hosting URLs,
then redeploy your app to Firebase so that it can automatically obtain the
new API key with the rest of your Firebase configuration.
If you self-host the sign-in
code,
copy the new API key and add it to your __/firebase/init.json file,
then redeploy your app.
Firebase Authentication: How do I manually construct an OAuth web
client??
Open the
Credentials
page of the Google Cloud console.
At the top of the page, select Create credentials > OAuth client ID.
If you're prompted to configure your consent screen, follow the on-screen
instructions, and then continue with the following steps of this FAQ.
Create the OAuth web client:
For the Application Type, select Web application.
For the Authorized JavaScript Origins, add the following:
Within the Sign in method tab, open the Google sign-in provider,
and then paste the web server client ID and secret you just constructed and
copied from the Google Cloud console. Click Save.
Firebase Authentication: How is %APP_NAME%
determined for the email template for the confirmation email that can be
sent to a user when they sign up using an email address and password?
Before December 2022, the %APP_NAME% in the email template was populated with
the OAuth brand name that was automatically provisioned whenever an Android app
was registered in the Firebase project. Now, since the OAuth brand is
provisioned only when Google sign-in is enabled, the following describes how
%APP_NAME% is determined:
If the OAuth brand name is available, then the %APP_NAME% in the email
template will be the OAuth brand name (same as pre-December 2022 behavior).
If the OAuth brand name is not available, here's how the %APP_NAME% in
the email template is determined:
For web apps, the %APP_NAME% will be the
default Firebase Hosting site name
(the value preceding .firebaseapp.com and .web.app and usually the
Firebase project ID).
For mobile apps:
If the Android package name or iOS bundle ID is present in the request,
then the %APP_NAME% will be the app name used in the Play Store or
App Store (respectively).
Otherwise, the %APP_NAME% will be the
default Firebase Hosting site name
(the value preceding .firebaseapp.com and .web.app and usually the
Firebase project ID).
Note that if the lookup of the default Firebase Hosting site name fails,
then the final fallback is to use the Firebase project ID as the %APP_NAME%.
Cloud Functions
Cloud Functions runtime support
How do I upgrade to the latest
supported version of Node.js?
How can I make sure I deployed my
functions to a specific Node.js runtime?
In the Firebase console, go to the functions dashboard,
select a function, and check the function's language under
Additional details.
I use Firebase Extensions.
Will I be affected by Cloud Functions runtime updates?
Yes. Since
extensions use Cloud Functions,
the runtime of your extensions will need to be updated on the same timeline as
Cloud Functions.
We recommend that you periodically update to the latest version of each
extension installed in your project.
You can upgrade your projects' extensions via the
Firebase console
or
Firebase CLI.
Cloud Messaging
Cloud Messaging: What's the difference between
the Notifications composer and Cloud Messaging?
Firebase Cloud Messaging provides a complete set of messaging
capabilities through its client SDKs and HTTP and XMPP server
protocols. For deployments with more complex messaging requirements,
FCM is the right choice.
The Notifications composer is a lightweight, serverless messaging
solution built on Firebase Cloud Messaging. With a user-friendly
graphical console and reduced coding requirements,
the Notifications composer lets users easily send messages to
reengage and retain users, foster app growth, and support marketing
campaigns.
Capabilities
Notifications composer
Cloud Messaging
Target
Single device
Clients subscribed to topics
(i. e. weather)
Clients in predefined user segment (app, version, language)
Clients in specified analytics audiences
Clients in device groups
Upstream from client to server
Message Type
Notifications up to 2kb
Data messages up to 4kb
Delivery
Immediate
Future client device local time
Analytics
Built-in Notifications analytics collection and funnel
analytics
Cloud Messaging: Apple announced they're deprecating
the legacy binary protocol for APNs. Do I need to do anything?
No. Firebase Cloud Messaging switched to the HTTP/2-based APNs protocol in
2017. If you are using FCM to send notifications to iOS devices,
there should be no action required on your part.
Cloud Messaging: Do I need to use other Firebase
services in order to use FCM?
You can use Firebase Cloud Messaging as a standalone component, in
the same manner as you did with GCM, without using other Firebase
services.
Cloud Messaging: I am an existing
Google Cloud Messaging (GCM) developer.
Should I move to Firebase Cloud Messaging?
FCM is the new version of GCM under the Firebase brand.
It inherits GCM’s core infrastructure, with new SDKs to make
Cloud Messaging development easier.
Benefits of upgrading to FCM SDK include:
Simpler client development. You no longer have to write your own
registration or subscription retry logic.
An out-of-the-box notification solution. You can use the Notifications composer,
a serverless notifications solution with a web console that lets anyone
send notifications to target specific audiences based on insights from
Google Analytics.
To upgrade from GCM SDKs to FCM SDKs, see the guides for
migrating
Android and
iOS apps.
Cloud Messaging: Why do my targeted devices apparently
fail to receive messages?
When it looks like devices haven't successfully received messages,
check first for these two potential causes:
Foreground message handling for notification messages.
Client apps need to add message handling logic to handle
notification messages when the app is in the foreground on the device.
See the details for
iOS and
Android.
Network firewall restrictions. If your organization has a
firewall that restricts the traffic to or
from the Internet, you need to configure it to allow connectivity with
FCM in order for
your Firebase Cloud Messaging client apps to receive messages.
The ports to open are:
5228
5229
5230
FCM usually uses 5228, but it sometimes uses 5229 and 5230.
FCM does not provide specific IPs, so you should allow your
firewall to accept outgoing connections to all IP addresses contained in the
IP blocks listed in Google's ASN of 15169.
Cloud Messaging: I have implemented
onMessageReceived in my Android app, but it is not being
called.
When your app is in the background,
notification messages are displayed in the system tray, and
onMessageReceived is not called. For notification messages with
a data payload, the notification message is displayed in the system tray,
and the data that was included with the notification message can be
retrieved from the intent launched when the user taps on the notification.
Notifications composer: What's the difference between
the Notifications composer and Cloud Messaging?
The Notifications composer is a lightweight, serverless messaging
solution built on Firebase Cloud Messaging. With a user-friendly
graphical console and reduced coding requirements,
the Notifications composer lets users easily send messages to
reengage and retain users, foster app growth, and support marketing
campaigns.
Firebase Cloud Messaging provides a complete set of messaging
capabilities through its client SDKs and HTTP and XMPP server
protocols. For deployments with more complex messaging requirements,
FCM is the right choice.
Here's a comparison of the messaging capabilities provided by
Firebase Cloud Messaging and the Notifications composer:
Capabilities
Notifications composer
Cloud Messaging
Target
Single device
Clients subscribed to topics
(i. e. weather)
Clients in predefined user segment (app, version, language)
Clients in specified analytics audiences
Clients in device groups
Upstream from client to server
Message Type
Notifications up to 2kb
Data messages up to 4kb
Delivery
Immediate
Future client device local time
Analytics
Built-in Notifications analytics collection and funnel
analytics
Notifications composer: I am an existing
Google Cloud Messaging (GCM) developer, and I want to use the Notifications composer.
What should I do?
The Notifications composer is an out-of-the-box solution that lets anyone
send notifications to target specific audiences based on insights from
Google Analytics. Also, the Notifications composer provides funnel
analysis for every message, allowing easy evaluation of notification
effectiveness.
If you are an existing GCM developer, to use the Notifications composer you have to
upgrade from GCM SDKs to FCM SDKs. See the guides for migrating
Android and
iOS apps.
FCM features deprecated in June 2023
Which FCM APIs were deprecated on June 20, 2023, and what should I do if I am using those APIs?
The following APIs/SDKs will be affected by the deprecation:
API calls to FirebaseMessaging.send in the app won’t trigger upstream messages to the app server after 6/21/2024.
Implement this functionality in your server logic. For example, some
developers implement their own HTTP/gRPC endpoint and call the endpoint
directly to send messages from their clients to the app server. See this
gRPC Quick start
for an example implementation of upstream messaging using gRPC.
These APIs will stop working after 6/21/2024 because they call the batch send API .
Upgrade to the latest Firebase Admin SDK and use the new APIs instead: sendEach()/
sendEachAsync()/send_each()/sendEachForMulticast()/sendEachForMulticastAsync()/
send_each_for_multicast().
Note that the new APIs no longer call the deprecated batch send API,
and for this reason they may create more concurrent HTTP connections than the old APIs.
Client SDKs
SDK versions
Impact on users
Action Required
GCM SDKs (deprecated in 2018)
Apps using GCM SDKs will not be able to register tokens nor receive messages from FCM after 6/21/2024.
Upgrade your Android SDK to the latest Firebase SDK if you haven’t already done so.
JS SDKs version <7.0.0 (breaking change at version 7.0.0 in 2019)
Web apps using older JS SDKs will not be able to register tokens after 6/21/2024.
Upgrade your Firebase Web SDK to the latest version.
Will I see a service downgrade before June 2024?
No. You have 12 months (06/20/2023 - 06/21/2024) to migrate from the old
APIs to new APIs without any service downgrade. We strongly recommend you to
plan the migration as early as possible so you won’t be impacted by the
decommissioning of the APIs in June 2024.
After June 2024, you
may see increased errors or lack of functionality when using the APIs/SDKs
listed above (see the next FAQ for more information).
How and when will the deprecated APIs be shut down?
FCM will start a gradual shutdown of deprecated APIs
around July 22nd, 2024. After this date, deprecated services will be subject
to a "flickering" process in which increasing numbers of
requests will return error responses. During the gradual ramp-down
period you can expect the following behavior and error responses to increase
in frequency over time:
Category
What to expect
Legacy HTTP protocol
Requests being rejected with HTTP code 301.
Legacy XMPP protocol
Requests being rejected with error code 302.
FCM Upstream
Messages being silently dropped by FCM backend.
Batch Send API
Requests being rejected with error code UNIMPLEMENTED and the error
message "The API is deprecated."
GCM SDKs - Register Tokens
Requests being rejected with HTTP code 301.
GCM SDKs - Send Messages
Requests being rejected with error code 400 and the error message
"V3 token has been deprecated."
JS SDKs version < 7.0.0
Requests being rejected with HTTP code 501.
Using server key to access Instance ID and device group management APIs
Requests being rejected with HTTP code 401.
What’s the difference between OAuth 2.0 tokens and server keys?
An OAuth 2.0 token is a short-lived token derived from a service
account. It’s Google’s standard auth model and it’s more secure than
static server keys.
Note that the request headers differ when you use OAuth
2.0 tokens for requests to different endpoints.
HTTP v1 API: Authorization: Bearer $oauth_token
Instance ID server API and Device group management API: Authorization: Bearer $oauth_token access_token_auth: true
Can I migrate my requests to the new API all at once?
We recommend that you slowly ramp up your traffic to the new API. If you
expect to send more than 600,000 messages/min on a regular basis,
contact
Firebase support for instructions on how to increase quota or get
recommendations on how to spread out traffic.
What’s the difference between the HTTP v1 API and the legacy APIs
when I send messages to topics/device groups?
Topics: you don’t need to add the "/topics/" prefix to your topic target when you use the v1 API.
Device groups: You can use a group token as a token target in the HTTP v1
API. However, the HTTP v1 API doesn’t return the success/failure counts in the
response. We recommend that you use FCM topics or manage your device groups by
yourself.
Does the HTTP v1 API support sending messages to multiple tokens
in one request?
No. This feature, called "multicast" in legacy HTTP APIs, is not supported by
the HTTP v1 API, which is better designed for scalability.
For use cases where end-to-end latency is critical, or where
total fanout size is small (fewer than 1 million),
Google recommends sending multiple separate requests using
the HTTP v1 API.
The HTTP v1 API over HTTP/2 performs similarly for 99.9% of multicast requests (sending < 100 tokens).
For outlier use cases (sending 1000 tokens), it achieves up to a third of the throughput rate,
so additional concurrency is needed to optimize for this atypical use case.
Users can experience more reliability and availability with the HTTP v1 API than with legacy multicast.
For use cases where throughput and egress bandwidth are prioritized
or where total fanout size is large (greater than 1 million), Google recommends
topic messaging. While topic messaging requires a one-time action to subscribe
recipients to a topic, it offers up to a
10,000 QPS per project fanout rate
without a maximum limit on topic size.
What versions of the Firebase Admin SDK have the new APIs?
Platform
Firebase Admin SDK version
Node.js
>=11.7.0
Python
>=6.2.0
Java
>=9.2.0
Go
>=4.12.0
.NET
>=2.4.0
What's the difference between the batch send API and the HTTP v1 API?
The FCM batch send API uses the same message
format and authentication mechanism as the HTTP v1 API. However, it uses a
different endpoint. If you want to improve efficiency, you should consider using
HTTP/2 to send multiple requests over the same HTTP connection to the HTTP v1
API.
What should I do if I can't access my project?
Please reach out to the Google Cloud support team for help.
Can new projects enable the legacy Cloud Messaging API?
No. Starting from 5/20/2024, new projects will no longer be allowed to
enable our legacy APIs.
When can I disable the legacy Cloud Messaging API?
Once you are sure that you have fully migrated to the HTTP v1 API, you can
disable the legacy Cloud Messaging API (the page may fail to load if the API
has already been disabled).
FCM quotas and limits
I need to notify a large customer base within 2 minutes.
Unfortunately, this use case cannot be supported. You must spread your traffic out over 5 minutes.
My app notifies users of events. The messages must be delivered immediately to support my business model. Can I get more quota?
Unfortunately, we cannot grant quota increases for this reason. You must spread your traffic out over 5 minutes.
My messages are about
scheduled events and I need to send all my traffic at the top of the
hour.
We recommend that you start sending the notifications at least 5
minutes prior to the event.
How long will it take for my
quota request to be fulfilled?
This depends a bit on your use of FCM.
In any case, you can expect an answer in a few business days. In some cases,
there may be some back-and-forth regarding your usage of FCM and various
circumstances, which can prolong the process. If all requirements are met,
most requests will be handled within 2 weeks.
429s are hard for me / my business
to deal with. Can I get an exemption or more quota to avoid getting 429s?
While we understand that quota limits can be challenging, quotas are vital
to keeping the service reliable and we can't grant exemptions.
Can I get more quota for a
temporary event?
You may request additional quota to support an event
lasting up to 1 month. File the request at least 1 month in advance of the
event and with clear details on when the event starts and ends, and FCM will
make every practical effort to fulfill the request (no increase can be
guaranteed). These quota increases will be reverted after the event's end
date.
Is my current quota subject to
change?
While Google will not do so lightly, quotas may be changed as
needed to protect the integrity of the system. When possible, Google will
notify you in advance of such changes.
Cloud Storage for Firebase
Cloud Storage for Firebase: Why can't I use Cloud Storage for Firebase?
Cloud Storage for Firebase creates a default bucket in the App Engine
no-cost tier. This allows you to quickly get up and running with
Firebase and Cloud Storage for Firebase, without having to put in a credit
card or enable a Cloud Billing account. It also allows you to easily
share data between Firebase and a Google Cloud project.
There are, however, two known cases where this bucket cannot be
created and you will be unable to use Cloud Storage for Firebase:
A project imported from Google Cloud which had a App Engine
Master/Slave Datastore application.
A project imported from Google Cloud which has domain
prefixed projects. For example: domain.com:project-1234.
There are currently no workarounds to these issues, and we recommend
that you create a new project in the Firebase console and enable
Cloud Storage for Firebase in that project.
Cloud Storage for Firebase: Why do I get error code 412
responses about service account permissions and failed service account
operations when using the Cloud Storage for Firebase API?
It's likely you're getting 412 error codes either because the
Cloud Storage for Firebase API is not enabled for your project or a
necessary service account is missing the required permissions.
Cloud Storage for Firebase: On Spark plan projects, can I store executable files?
For no-cost (Spark) plan projects, Firebase blocks uploads and hosting of certain
executable file types for Windows, Android and Apple by Cloud Storage for Firebase and
Firebase Hosting. This policy exists to prevent abuse on our platform.
Serving, hosting and file uploads of disallowed files are blocked for all Spark projects created
on or after Sept 28th, 2023. For existing Spark projects with files uploaded before that date,
such files can still be uploaded and hosted.
This restriction applies to Spark plan projects. Projects on the pay as you go (Blaze) plan
are not affected.
The following file types cannot be hosted on Firebase Hosting and Cloud Storage for Firebase:
Windows files with .exe, .dll and .bat extensions
Android files with .apk extension
Apple platform files with .ipa extension
What do I need to do?
If you still want to host these file types after September 28th, 2023:
For Hosting: upgrade to the Blaze plan before you can deploy these
file types to Firebase Hosting via the firebase deploy command.
For Storage: upgrade to the Blaze plan to upload these file types to the
bucket of your choice using the GCS CLI, the Firebase console, or Google Cloud console.
Use Firebase tools to manage your Firebase Hosting and Cloud Storage resources.
For managing resources in Firebase Hosting, use the Firebase console
to delete releases according to this guide.
For managing resources in Cloud Storage, navigate to the
Storage
product page in your project.
On the Files tab, locate disallowed files to delete in your folder
hierarchy, then select them using the checkbox next to the filename(s) on the left-hand side
of the panel.
Cloud Storage for Firebase: Why do I see an unexpected
increase in upload and download operations?
Previously, download and upload requests to the Cloud Storage for Firebase API
were not being counted properly. We have taken steps to fix this issue,
starting from September 15, 2023.
For Blaze users, upload and download operations will start counting towards
your monthly bill. For Spark users, they will start counting towards your
monthly free limit.
We recommend monitoring your
Usage page
for any increases that may count towards your limits.
Cloud Storage for Firebase: Why do I see new service
account IDs associated with my Firebase projects that use
Cloud Storage for Firebase?
Firebase uses service accounts to operate and manage services without
sharing user credentials. When you create a Firebase project, you might
notice that a number of service accounts are already available in your
project.
The service account that Cloud Storage for Firebase uses is scoped to your
project and is named service-PROJECT_NUMBER@gcp-sa-firebasestorage.iam.gserviceaccount.com.
If you used Cloud Storage for Firebase before September 19, 2022, you may
see an additional service account on previously-linked Cloud Storage
buckets named [email protected]. As
of September 19, 2022, this service account is no longer supported.
You can view all service accounts associated with your project in the
Firebase console, on the Service accounts tab.
Adding the new service account
If you removed the service account previously or the service account is not
present in your project, you may do one of the following to add the account.
(Recommended) Automated: Use the AddFirebase
REST endpoint to re-import your bucket into Firebase. You will only need
to call this endpoint once, not once for each linked bucket.
We strongly discourage you from removing the service account because this
may block access to your Cloud Storage buckets from your apps. To
remove the service account from your project, follow the instructions in Disabling a service account.
Dynamic Links: Why does my Android app access each Dynamic Link
twice?
The getInvitation API clears the saved Dynamic Link
to prevent it from being accessed twice. Be sure to call this API
with the autoLaunchDeepLink parameter set to
false in each of the deep link activities to clear it
for the case when the activity is triggered outside the main
activity.
Firebase Local Emulator Suite
Why do Emulator Suite logs show an error starting with "Multiple projectIds
are not recommended in single project mode"?
This message means the Emulator Suite has detected it may be running
a particular product emulator using different project IDs. This may indicate
a misconfiguration, and can cause issues when emulators try to communicate
with one another, and when you try to interact with emulators from your
code. If project IDs don't match, it often appears that data is missing,
since data stored in emulators is keyed to projectID, and interoperability
depends on matching project IDs.
This has been a common source of confusion among developers, so by
default the Local Emulator Suite will now only allow running with a
single project ID, unless you specify otherwise in the
firebase.json configuration file. If an emulator detects more
than one project ID, it will log a warning and potentially throw a fatal
error.
Check your project ID declaration(s) for mismatches in:
The default project set at the command line. By default,
the project ID will be taken on startup from the project selected with
firebase init or firebase use. To view the list
of projects (and see which one is selected) use
firebase projects:list.
Unit tests. The project ID is often specified in calls
to the Rules Unit Testing library methods
initializeTestEnvironment or initializeTestApp.
Other testing code may initialize with initializeApp(config).
The command line --project flag. Passing the
Firebase CLI --project flag overrides the default
project. You'll need to ensure the value of the flag matches the
project ID in unit tests and app initialization.
Platform-specific places to check:
Web
The projectId property in your JavaScript
firebaseConfig object, used in initializeApp.
Android
The project_id property inside the
google-services.json configuration file.
Apple platforms
The PROJECT_ID property in the
GoogleService-Info.plist configuration file.
To disable single project mode, update firebase.json with the
singleProjectMode key:
Hosting: On Spark plan projects, can I store executable files?
For no-cost (Spark) plan projects, Firebase blocks uploads and hosting of certain
executable file types for Windows, Android and Apple by Cloud Storage for Firebase and
Firebase Hosting. This policy exists to prevent abuse on our platform.
Serving, hosting and file uploads of disallowed files are blocked for all Spark projects created
on or after Sept 28th, 2023. For existing Spark projects with files uploaded before that date,
such files can still be uploaded and hosted.
This restriction applies to Spark plan projects. Projects on the pay as you go (Blaze) plan
are not affected.
The following file types cannot be hosted on Firebase Hosting and Cloud Storage for Firebase:
Windows files with .exe, .dll and .bat extensions
Android files with .apk extension
Apple platform files with .ipa extension
What do I need to do?
If you still want to host these file types after September 28th, 2023:
For Hosting: upgrade to the Blaze plan before you can deploy these
file types to Firebase Hosting via the firebase deploy command.
For Storage: upgrade to the Blaze plan to upload these file types to the
bucket of your choice using the GCS CLI, the Firebase console, or Google Cloud console.
Use Firebase tools to manage your Firebase Hosting and Cloud Storage resources.
For managing resources in Firebase Hosting, use the Firebase console
to delete releases according to this guide.
For managing resources in Cloud Storage, navigate to the
Storage
product page in your project.
On the Files tab, locate disallowed files to delete in your folder
hierarchy, then select them using the checkbox next to the filename(s) on the left-hand side
of the panel.
Hosting: Why does my Hosting release history table
in the Firebase console show file counts that are more than what my local
project actually has?
Firebase automatically adds extra files containing metadata about the
Hosting site, and these files are included in the total file count for
the release.
Hosting: What's the largest file size that I can
deploy to Firebase Hosting?
Hosting has a maximum size limit of 2 GB for
individual files.
We recommend storing larger files using
Cloud Storage, which offers a
maximum size limit in the terabyte range for individual objects.
Hosting: How many Hosting sites can I have per
Firebase project?
Performance Monitoring: How many custom URL patterns can I create?
You can create up to 400 total custom URL patterns per app and up to 100 custom URL patterns per
domain for that app.
Performance Monitoring:
Why am I not seeing real time display of performance data?
To view real time performance data, make sure that your app uses a
Performance Monitoring SDK version that's compatible with real time data
processing.
iOS — v7.3.0 or later
tvOS — v8.9.0 or later
Android — v19.0.10 or later (or Firebase Android BoM v26.1.0 or later)
Web — v7.14.0 or later
Note that we always recommend using the latest version of SDK, but any
version listed above will enable Performance Monitoring to process your data in near real
time.
Realtime Database
Realtime Database: Why was my Realtime Database reported
bandwidth lower than average between September 2016 and March 2017?
For our bandwidth calculations, we normally include SSL encryption
overhead (based on layer 5 of the OSI model). However, in September
2016, we introduced a bug that caused our bandwidth
reporting to ignore encryption overhead. This might have resulted
in artificially low reported bandwidth and bills on your account for
a few months.
We released a fix for the bug in late March 2017, returning bandwidth
reporting and billing to their normal levels.
Realtime Database: What are the scaling limitations of the
Realtime Database?
Each Realtime Database instance has limits on the number of write
operations per second. For small writes, this limit is approximately
1000 write operations per second. If you are approaching this
limit,
batching operations using multi-path updates can help you
achieve higher throughput.
Realtime Database: What can I do if I'm over my Realtime Database
usage limits?
If you've received an email alert or notification in the
Firebase console that you've exceeded your Realtime Database usage limits, you
can address it based on the usage limit you've exceeded. To see your
Realtime Database usage, go to the
Realtime DatabaseUsage dashboard in the
Firebase console.
If you're over your download limit, you can upgrade your
Firebase pricing plan or wait until your download
limit resets at the start of your next billing cycle. To decrease your
downloads, try the following steps:
Add queries to limit the data that your listen operations return.
Check for unindexed queries.
Use listeners that only download updates to data — for example,
on() instead of once().
Use security rules to block unauthorized downloads.
If you're over your storage limit, upgrade your pricing
plan to avoid service disruptions. To reduce the amount of data in your
database, try the following steps:
Run periodic cleanup jobs.
Reduce any duplicate data in your database.
Note that it may take some time to see any data deletions reflected in your
storage allotment.
If you're over your simultaneous database connections
limit, upgrade your plan to avoid any service disruptions. To
manage simultaneous connections to your database, try connecting via users
via the REST API if they don't require a realtime connection.
Remote Config
Remote Config: Why don't fetched values change the
behavior and appearance of my app?
Unless you fetch values with
fetchAndActivate(),
values are stored locally but not activated. To activate fetched values so
that they can take effect, call activate. This design lets you
control when the behavior and appearance of your app changes, because you
can choose when to call activate. After you call
activate, your app source code determines when updated
parameter values are used.
For example, you could fetch values and then activate them the next time a
user starts your app, which removes the need to delay app startup while your
app waits for fetched values from the service. Changes to your app's
behavior and appearance then occur when your app uses the updated parameter
values.
Remote Config: I am making a lot of fetch requests
while developing my app. Why doesn't my app always get the latest values
from the service when it sends fetch requests?
During app development, you might want to fetch and activate configs very
frequently (many times per hour) to let you rapidly iterate as you develop
and test your app. To accommodate rapid iteration on a project with up to 10
developers, you can temporarily set a
FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings object with a low minimum fetch
interval (setMinimumFetchIntervalInSeconds) in your app.
Remote Config: How quickly does the Remote Config
service return fetched values after my app sends a fetch request?
Devices usually receive fetched values in less than a second, and often
receive fetched values in milliseconds. The Remote Config service
handles fetch requests within milliseconds, but the time required to
complete a fetch request will depend on the network speed of the device and
the latency of the network connection used by the device.
If your goal is to make fetched values take effect in your app as
soon as possible, but without creating a jarring user experience,
consider adding calls to fetchAndActivate each time that
your app does a full screen refresh.
Firebase User Segmentation Storage stores
Firebase installation IDs
and related attributes and segments as well as audience lists you've created
to provide targeting information to other Firebase services that use them,
such as Crashlytics, FCM, Remote Config personalization, and more.
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