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expo-api-routes

Guidelines for creating API routes in Expo Router with EAS Hosting

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This page reorganizes the original catalog entry around fit, installability, and workflow context first. The original raw source lives below.

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Install command

npx @skill-hub/cli install expo-skills-expo-api-routes

Repository

expo/skills

Skill path: plugins/expo-app-design/skills/expo-api-routes

Guidelines for creating API routes in Expo Router with EAS Hosting

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Primary workflow: Build Mobile.

Technical facets: Full Stack, Backend, Mobile.

Target audience: everyone.

License: MIT.

Original source

Catalog source: SkillHub Club.

Repository owner: expo.

This is still a mirrored public skill entry. Review the repository before installing into production workflows.

What it helps with

  • Install expo-api-routes into Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, or OpenCode workflows
  • Review https://github.com/expo/skills before adding expo-api-routes to shared team environments
  • Use expo-api-routes for development workflows

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Original source / Raw SKILL.md

---
name: expo-api-routes
description: Guidelines for creating API routes in Expo Router with EAS Hosting
version: 1.0.0
license: MIT
---

## When to Use API Routes

Use API routes when you need:

- **Server-side secrets** — API keys, database credentials, or tokens that must never reach the client
- **Database operations** — Direct database queries that shouldn't be exposed
- **Third-party API proxies** — Hide API keys when calling external services (OpenAI, Stripe, etc.)
- **Server-side validation** — Validate data before database writes
- **Webhook endpoints** — Receive callbacks from services like Stripe or GitHub
- **Rate limiting** — Control access at the server level
- **Heavy computation** — Offload processing that would be slow on mobile

## When NOT to Use API Routes

Avoid API routes when:

- **Data is already public** — Use direct fetch to public APIs instead
- **No secrets required** — Static data or client-safe operations
- **Real-time updates needed** — Use WebSockets or services like Supabase Realtime
- **Simple CRUD** — Consider Firebase, Supabase, or Convex for managed backends
- **File uploads** — Use direct-to-storage uploads (S3 presigned URLs, Cloudflare R2)
- **Authentication only** — Use Clerk, Auth0, or Firebase Auth instead

## File Structure

API routes live in the `app` directory with `+api.ts` suffix:

```
app/
  api/
    hello+api.ts          → GET /api/hello
    users+api.ts          → /api/users
    users/[id]+api.ts     → /api/users/:id
  (tabs)/
    index.tsx
```

## Basic API Route

```ts
// app/api/hello+api.ts
export function GET(request: Request) {
  return Response.json({ message: "Hello from Expo!" });
}
```

## HTTP Methods

Export named functions for each HTTP method:

```ts
// app/api/items+api.ts
export function GET(request: Request) {
  return Response.json({ items: [] });
}

export async function POST(request: Request) {
  const body = await request.json();
  return Response.json({ created: body }, { status: 201 });
}

export async function PUT(request: Request) {
  const body = await request.json();
  return Response.json({ updated: body });
}

export async function DELETE(request: Request) {
  return new Response(null, { status: 204 });
}
```

## Dynamic Routes

```ts
// app/api/users/[id]+api.ts
export function GET(request: Request, { id }: { id: string }) {
  return Response.json({ userId: id });
}
```

## Request Handling

### Query Parameters

```ts
export function GET(request: Request) {
  const url = new URL(request.url);
  const page = url.searchParams.get("page") ?? "1";
  const limit = url.searchParams.get("limit") ?? "10";

  return Response.json({ page, limit });
}
```

### Headers

```ts
export function GET(request: Request) {
  const auth = request.headers.get("Authorization");

  if (!auth) {
    return Response.json({ error: "Unauthorized" }, { status: 401 });
  }

  return Response.json({ authenticated: true });
}
```

### JSON Body

```ts
export async function POST(request: Request) {
  const { email, password } = await request.json();

  if (!email || !password) {
    return Response.json({ error: "Missing fields" }, { status: 400 });
  }

  return Response.json({ success: true });
}
```

## Environment Variables

Use `process.env` for server-side secrets:

```ts
// app/api/ai+api.ts
export async function POST(request: Request) {
  const { prompt } = await request.json();

  const response = await fetch("https://api.openai.com/v1/chat/completions", {
    method: "POST",
    headers: {
      "Content-Type": "application/json",
      Authorization: `Bearer ${process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY}`,
    },
    body: JSON.stringify({
      model: "gpt-4",
      messages: [{ role: "user", content: prompt }],
    }),
  });

  const data = await response.json();
  return Response.json(data);
}
```

Set environment variables:

- **Local**: Create `.env` file (never commit)
- **EAS Hosting**: Use `eas env:create` or Expo dashboard

## CORS Headers

Add CORS for web clients:

```ts
const corsHeaders = {
  "Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*",
  "Access-Control-Allow-Methods": "GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS",
  "Access-Control-Allow-Headers": "Content-Type, Authorization",
};

export function OPTIONS() {
  return new Response(null, { headers: corsHeaders });
}

export function GET() {
  return Response.json({ data: "value" }, { headers: corsHeaders });
}
```

## Error Handling

```ts
export async function POST(request: Request) {
  try {
    const body = await request.json();
    // Process...
    return Response.json({ success: true });
  } catch (error) {
    console.error("API error:", error);
    return Response.json({ error: "Internal server error" }, { status: 500 });
  }
}
```

## Testing Locally

Start the development server with API routes:

```bash
npx expo serve
```

This starts a local server at `http://localhost:8081` with full API route support.

Test with curl:

```bash
curl http://localhost:8081/api/hello
curl -X POST http://localhost:8081/api/users -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name":"Test"}'
```

## Deployment to EAS Hosting

### Prerequisites

```bash
npm install -g eas-cli
eas login
```

### Deploy

```bash
eas deploy
```

This builds and deploys your API routes to EAS Hosting (Cloudflare Workers).

### Environment Variables for Production

```bash
# Create a secret
eas env:create --name OPENAI_API_KEY --value sk-xxx --environment production

# Or use the Expo dashboard
```

### Custom Domain

Configure in `eas.json` or Expo dashboard.

## EAS Hosting Runtime (Cloudflare Workers)

API routes run on Cloudflare Workers. Key limitations:

### Missing/Limited APIs

- **No Node.js filesystem** — `fs` module unavailable
- **No native Node modules** — Use Web APIs or polyfills
- **Limited execution time** — 30 second timeout for CPU-intensive tasks
- **No persistent connections** — WebSockets require Durable Objects
- **fetch is available** — Use standard fetch for HTTP requests

### Use Web APIs Instead

```ts
// Use Web Crypto instead of Node crypto
const hash = await crypto.subtle.digest(
  "SHA-256",
  new TextEncoder().encode("data")
);

// Use fetch instead of node-fetch
const response = await fetch("https://api.example.com");

// Use Response/Request (already available)
return new Response(JSON.stringify(data), {
  headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
});
```

### Database Options

Since filesystem is unavailable, use cloud databases:

- **Cloudflare D1** — SQLite at the edge
- **Turso** — Distributed SQLite
- **PlanetScale** — Serverless MySQL
- **Supabase** — Postgres with REST API
- **Neon** — Serverless Postgres

Example with Turso:

```ts
// app/api/users+api.ts
import { createClient } from "@libsql/client/web";

const db = createClient({
  url: process.env.TURSO_URL!,
  authToken: process.env.TURSO_AUTH_TOKEN!,
});

export async function GET() {
  const result = await db.execute("SELECT * FROM users");
  return Response.json(result.rows);
}
```

## Calling API Routes from Client

```ts
// From React Native components
const response = await fetch("/api/hello");
const data = await response.json();

// With body
const response = await fetch("/api/users", {
  method: "POST",
  headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
  body: JSON.stringify({ name: "John" }),
});
```

## Common Patterns

### Authentication Middleware

```ts
// utils/auth.ts
export async function requireAuth(request: Request) {
  const token = request.headers.get("Authorization")?.replace("Bearer ", "");

  if (!token) {
    throw new Response(JSON.stringify({ error: "Unauthorized" }), {
      status: 401,
      headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
    });
  }

  // Verify token...
  return { userId: "123" };
}

// app/api/protected+api.ts
import { requireAuth } from "../../utils/auth";

export async function GET(request: Request) {
  const { userId } = await requireAuth(request);
  return Response.json({ userId });
}
```

### Proxy External API

```ts
// app/api/weather+api.ts
export async function GET(request: Request) {
  const url = new URL(request.url);
  const city = url.searchParams.get("city");

  const response = await fetch(
    `https://api.weather.com/v1/current?city=${city}&key=${process.env.WEATHER_API_KEY}`
  );

  return Response.json(await response.json());
}
```

## Rules

- NEVER expose API keys or secrets in client code
- ALWAYS validate and sanitize user input
- Use proper HTTP status codes (200, 201, 400, 401, 404, 500)
- Handle errors gracefully with try/catch
- Keep API routes focused — one responsibility per endpoint
- Use TypeScript for type safety
- Log errors server-side for debugging
expo-api-routes | SkillHub