How to Receive Twilio Webhooks in FastAPI

Read request.body() before any json() call

FastAPI is the modern Python web framework of choice for new projects in 2026. Pydantic-style request models are great for application APIs but actively get in the way of webhooks — you need the raw bytes the sender signed, not a parsed Pydantic object. This guide walks through the FastAPI setup for Twilio webhooks end to end: capturing the raw body, verifying the signature, handling retries idempotently, and iterating locally without redeploying. Cross-reference the Twilio Webhooks overview for the event catalog and sample payload.

Twilio Official Webhook Docs

1. Set Up the FastAPI 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.

# main.py
from fastapi import FastAPI, Request, HTTPException
import json

app = FastAPI()


@app.post("/api/webhooks/{service}")
async def webhook(service: str, request: Request):
    # IMPORTANT: read the raw body FIRST.
    # Once you call request.json() the body is consumed.
    raw_body = await request.body()
    signature = request.headers.get("x-signature-header", "")

    # 1. Verify HMAC over raw_body
    # 2. Parse JSON only after verification passes
    # 3. Process the event idempotently (use the event id as your key)

    event = json.loads(raw_body)
    print("Verified webhook:", event.get("type") or event)

    return {"status": "ok"}
Raw body, every time
Don't declare the body as a Pydantic model on the webhook route — FastAPI will deserialize it eagerly and the raw bytes used by the signing algorithm are gone. Take a fastapi.Request and call await request.body() yourself. If you need the parsed payload AFTER verification, run json.loads(raw_body) in the handler.

2. Verify the Twilio Signature

Signing details
Algorithm
HMAC-SHA1
Header
X-Twilio-Signature
Encoding
base64

Twilio signs `{full_request_url}` concatenated with each form-encoded POST parameter sorted alphabetically by name (key+value, no separator). The exact URL must be the public-facing one Twilio called — not localhost.

Python verification

# Use the official twilio-python validator — it implements the
# alphabetical-sort + concatenation rules correctly.
import os
from twilio.request_validator import RequestValidator
from fastapi import FastAPI, Request, HTTPException

validator = RequestValidator(os.environ['TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN'])
app = FastAPI()

@app.post("/webhooks/twilio")
async def twilio_webhook(request: Request):
    form = dict(await request.form())
    signature = request.headers.get('x-twilio-signature', '')
    full_url = str(request.url)  # must be the public-facing URL
    if not validator.validate(full_url, form, signature):
        raise HTTPException(status_code=401, detail='invalid signature')
    return {'ok': True}

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

Watch out: Twilio's signing string includes the full request URL. Reverse proxies that change the host header (Cloudflare, Vercel, ngrok) can break verification — use the URL Twilio actually called, not the internal one your handler sees.

See Twilio'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

Twilio 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. Twilio Retry Behaviour

Retry policy
Max attempts
Configurable (1 retry default)
Total window
~15 seconds default
Backoff
Configurable per webhook (Slow / Fast retry)
Retries on
Non-2xx, timeouts (15s)
Stops on
Any 2xx, OR after the configured retry count

Combine the retry numbers above with the idempotency pattern in section 3: aim to acknowledge fast (return 200 under the timeout) and let the idempotency table absorb any duplicates from in-flight retries. The full pattern, including dead-letter queues and replay-from-capture, lives in the Webhook Retry Strategies guide.

5. Test Locally Without Deploying

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

  1. Get a free webhook URL at hookray.com — no signup.
  2. Paste the URL into your Twiliodashboard'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/twilio (or wherever your FastAPI app is listening) — iterate on your code without re-poking the Twilio dashboard.

Deploying the FastAPI Handler

FastAPI is typically deployed behind Uvicorn or Gunicorn + Uvicorn workers. For webhook handlers specifically, ensure your reverse proxy (Nginx, Cloud Load Balancing, etc.) doesn't buffer or rewrite request bodies — some default configurations strip trailing whitespace or normalise charset, which silently breaks HMAC.

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.

Capture a real Twilio webhook in 30 seconds

Free webhook URL, real-time payload inspection, one-click replay. No signup required.

Start Testing — Free