Guidelines for creating API routes in Expo Router with EAS Hosting
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
// 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:
// 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
// app/api/users/[id]+api.ts
export function GET(request: Request, { id }: { id: string }) {
return Response.json({ userId: id });
}
Request Handling
Query Parameters
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
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
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:
// 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:
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
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:
npx expo serve
This starts a local server at http://localhost:8081 with full API route support.
Test with curl:
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
npm install -g eas-cli
eas login
Deploy
eas deploy
This builds and deploys your API routes to EAS Hosting (Cloudflare Workers).
Environment Variables for Production
# 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
// 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:
// 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
// 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
// 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
// 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 debuggingdon't have the plugin yet? install it then click "run inline in claude" again.