How to Receive Discord Webhooks in Express

Raw-body middleware ordering for HMAC-friendly handlers

Express is still the default Node.js HTTP framework and powers an enormous amount of production webhook infrastructure. Its body-parsing middleware order is the single most common cause of 'signature mismatch' tickets — fix the ordering once and verification 'just works' across every provider. This guide walks through the Express setup for Discord webhooks end to end: capturing the raw body, verifying the signature, handling retries idempotently, and iterating locally without redeploying. Cross-reference the Discord Webhooks overview for the event catalog and sample payload.

Discord Official Webhook Docs

1. Set Up the Express Endpoint

The endpoint needs to do three things, in this order: read the raw body, verify the signature against those exact bytes, and only then parse the JSON for your business logic.

// server.ts
import express from "express";

const app = express();

// 1. Mount raw-body parser on the webhook route ONLY, BEFORE express.json().
//    The "verify" callback hands you the unparsed Buffer to keep alongside req.body.
app.post(
  "/api/webhooks/:service",
  express.raw({ type: "application/json" }),
  (req, res) => {
    const rawBody = req.body as Buffer; // Buffer, not parsed JSON
    const signature = req.header("x-signature-header") ?? "";

    // 1. Verify HMAC over rawBody.toString("utf8")
    // 2. Parse JSON only after verification passes
    // 3. Process the event idempotently (use the event id as your key)

    const event = JSON.parse(rawBody.toString("utf8"));
    console.log("Verified webhook:", event.type ?? event);

    res.status(200).send("ok");
  },
);

// 2. JSON middleware comes AFTER the webhook route, so it doesn't consume
//    your webhook bodies before your handler sees them.
app.use(express.json());

app.listen(3000);
Raw body, every time
If you mount express.json() before your webhook route — or globally — every body becomes a parsed object and the original bytes are gone. The fix is to either put express.raw() on the webhook route ahead of express.json(), or to use express.json({ verify: (req, _res, buf) => { (req as any).rawBody = buf; } }) globally so you keep both representations. Pick one pattern and stick to it.

2. Verify the Discord Signature

Signing details
Algorithm
Ed25519
Header
X-Signature-Ed25519
Encoding
hex

Discord uses Ed25519 (not HMAC). The signed string is `{X-Signature-Timestamp}{raw_request_body}`. Both headers — `X-Signature-Ed25519` (signature) and `X-Signature-Timestamp` (timestamp) — are required.

Node.js verification

// npm i tweetnacl
import nacl from 'tweetnacl';
import express from 'express';

const PUBLIC_KEY = process.env.DISCORD_PUBLIC_KEY!; // hex string from Dev Portal

const app = express();

app.post(
  '/webhooks/discord',
  express.raw({ type: 'application/json' }),
  (req, res) => {
    const signature = req.headers['x-signature-ed25519'] as string | undefined;
    const timestamp = req.headers['x-signature-timestamp'] as string | undefined;
    if (!signature || !timestamp) {
      return res.status(401).send('missing signature headers');
    }

    const isValid = nacl.sign.detached.verify(
      Buffer.concat([Buffer.from(timestamp), req.body]),
      Buffer.from(signature, 'hex'),
      Buffer.from(PUBLIC_KEY, 'hex'),
    );

    if (!isValid) return res.status(401).send('invalid signature');

    const interaction = JSON.parse(req.body.toString('utf8'));
    // type 1 is PING — Discord uses it to verify the endpoint at registration
    if (interaction.type === 1) return res.json({ type: 1 });
    res.json({ type: 4, data: { content: 'ack' } });
  },
);

Wire this verification call into the Express handler from section 1. The pattern is identical across Express versions: read raw body, verify, parse JSON, dispatch.

Watch out: Discord uses Ed25519 elliptic-curve signatures, not HMAC. You verify with Discord's public key (from the Developer Portal), and you don't have a shared secret. If you copy a Stripe-style verifier and try to swap in `crypto.createHmac`, it will silently produce signatures that never match.

See Discord's official signing docs for the canonical reference, or the cross-service signature verification guide for the same pattern in Ruby and other languages.

3. Make the Handler Idempotent

Discord can — and will — send the same event twice. Network blips, your server returning a 5xx mid-processing, deploy windows: any of these triggers a retry, and your handler will see the same event id again. Build for that on day one rather than chasing duplicate-charge bugs in production.

The simplest pattern is a unique constraint on the event id in your database. The handler does the work inside a transaction, and the insert into the events table is the last step — if a retry arrives, the unique-constraint violation tells you the event already committed and you can return 200 without re-running the side effects.

Pattern in any framework:

  1. Read raw body, verify signature.
  2. Begin transaction.
  3. Apply business logic (charge, fulfil, notify, etc.).
  4. Insert event id into processed_events with a unique constraint.
  5. Commit. Return 200.
  6. On unique-constraint violation, return 200 — the event was already processed by a prior delivery.

4. Test Locally Without Deploying

The fastest iteration loop for any webhook handler is: capture a real Discord event with HookRay, then replay that captured request against your local Express server until the verification + business logic both pass. No need to retrigger the event in Discord, no need to redeploy.

  1. Get a free webhook URL at hookray.com — no signup.
  2. Paste the URL into your Discorddashboard's webhook settings.
  3. Trigger a test event. HookRay shows the headers, raw body, and parsed payload in real time.
  4. Use HookRay's replay feature to send the captured request against http://localhost:3000/api/webhooks/discord (or wherever your Express app is listening) — iterate on your code without re-poking the Discord dashboard.

Deploying the Express Handler

Express works equally well on a long-running container (Render, Fly.io, ECS, GCP Cloud Run) or a serverless adapter (Vercel's Express adapter, AWS Lambda + serverless-http). For webhooks specifically, prefer a long-running runtime — cold starts on first request can push past the sender's retry timeout.

Need a host that boots quickly enough to absorb webhook bursts? DigitalOcean droplets stay warm, support raw-body proxies cleanly, and avoid the cold-start traps of some serverless runtimes.

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