---
id: form-validation
title: Form and Field Validation
---
At the core of TanStack Form's functionalities is the concept of validation. TanStack Form makes validation highly customizable:
- You can control when to perform the validation (on change, on input, on blur, on submit...)
- Validation rules can be defined at the field level or at the form level
- Validation can be synchronous or asynchronous (for example as a result of an API call)
## When is validation performed?
It's up to you! The `` component accepts some callbacks as props such as `onChange` or `onBlur`. Those callbacks are passed the current value of the field, as well as the fieldAPI object, so that you can perform the validation. If you find a validation error, simply return the error message as string and it will be available in `field.state.meta.errors`.
Here is an example:
```tsx
val < 13 ? "You must be 13 to make an account" : undefined}
>
{field => (
<>
field.handleChange(e.target.valueAsNumber)}
/>
{field.state.meta.errors ? {field.state.meta.errors.join(', ')} : null}
>
)}
```
In the example above, the validation is done at each keystroke (`onChange`). If, instead, we wanted the validation to be done when the field is blurred, we would change the code above like so:
```tsx
val < 13 ? "You must be 13 to make an account" : undefined}
>
{field => (
<>
field.handleChange(e.target.valueAsNumber)}
/>
{field.state.meta.errors ? {field.state.meta.errors.join(', ')} : null}
>
)}
```
So you can control when the validation is done by implementing the desired callback. You can even perform different pieces of validation at different times:
```tsx
val < 13 ? "You must be 13 to make an account" : undefined}
onBlur={(val) => (val < 0 ? "Invalid value" : undefined)}
>
{field => (
<>
field.handleChange(e.target.valueAsNumber)}
/>
{field.state.meta.errors ? {field.state.meta.errors.join(', ')} : null}
>
)}
```
In the example above, we are validating different things on the same field at different times (at each keystroke and when blurring the field). Since `field.state.meta.errors` is an array, all the relevant errors at a given time are displayed. You can also use `field.state.meta.errorMap` to get errors based on *when* the validation was done (onChange, onBlur etc...). More info about displaying errors below.
## Displaying Errors
Once you have your validation in place, you can map the errors from an array to be displayed in your UI:
```tsx
val < 13 ? "You must be 13 to make an account" : undefined}
>
{(field) => {
return (
<>
{/* ... */}
{field.state.meta.errors ? (
{field.state.meta.errors}
) : null}
>
);
}}
```
Or use the `errorMap` property to access the specific error you're looking for:
```tsx
val < 13 ? "You must be 13 to make an account" : undefined}
>
{(field) => (
<>
{/* ... */}
{field.state.meta.errorMap['onChange'] ? (
{field.state.meta.errorMap['onChange']}
) : null}
>
)}
```
## Validation at field level vs at form level
As shown above, each `` accepts its own validation rules via the `onChange`, `onBlur` etc... callbacks. It is also possible to define validation rules at the form level (as opposed to field by field) by passing similar callbacks to the `useForm()` hook.
{/* TODO: add more details when those callbacks are fixed */}
## Asynchronous Functional Validation
While we suspect most validations will be synchronous, there's many instances where a network call or some other async operation would be useful to validate against.
To do this, we have dedicated `onChangeAsync`, `onBlurAsync`, and other methods that can be used to validate against:
```tsx
{
await new Promise((resolve) => setTimeout(resolve, 1000));
return (
value < 13 ? "You must be 13 to make an account" : undefined
);
}}
>
{field => (
<>
field.handleChange(e.target.valueAsNumber)}
/>
{field.state.meta.errors ? {field.state.meta.errors.join(', ')} : null}
>
)}
```
Synchronous and Asynchronous validations can coexist. For example it is possible to define both `onBlur` and `onBlurAsync` on the same field:
```tsx
value < 13 ? "You must be at least 13" : undefined}
onBlurAsync={async (value) => {
const currentAge = await fetchCurrentAgeOnProfile();
return (
value < currentAge ? "You can only increase the age" : undefined
);
}}
>
{field => (
<>
field.handleChange(e.target.valueAsNumber)}
/>
{field.state.meta.errors ? {field.state.meta.errors.join(', ')} : null}
>
)}
```
The synchronous validation method (`onBlur`) is run first and the asynchronous method (`onBlurAsync`) is only run if the synchronous one (`onBlur`) succeeds. To change this behaviour, set the `asyncAlways` option to `true`, and the async method will be run regardless of the result of the sync method.
### Built-in Debouncing
While async calls are the way to go when validating against the database, running a network request on every keystroke is a good way to DDOS your database.
Instead, we enable an easy method for debouncing your `async` calls by adding a single property:
```tsx
{
// ...
}}
children={(field) => {
return (
<>
{/* ... */}
>
);
}}
/>
```
This will debounce every async call with a 500ms delay. You can even override this property on a per-validation property:
```tsx
{
// ...
}}
onBlurAsync={async (value) => {
// ...
}}
children={(field) => {
return (
<>
{/* ... */}
>
);
}}
/>
```
> This will run `onChangeAsync` every 1500ms while `onBlurAsync` will run every 500ms.
## Adapter-Based Validation (Zod, Yup, Valibot)
While functions provide more flexibility and customization over your validation, they can be a bit verbose. To help solve this, there are libraries like [Valibot](https://valibot.dev/), [Yup](https://github.com/jquense/yup), and [Zod](https://zod.dev/) that provide schema-based validation to make shorthand and type-strict validation substantially easier.
Luckily, we support both of these libraries through official adapters:
```bash
$ npm install @tanstack/zod-form-adapter zod
# or
$ npm install @tanstack/yup-form-adapter yup
# or
$ npm install @tanstack/valibot-form-adapter valibot
```
Once done, we can add the adapter to the `validator` property on the form or field:
```tsx
import { zodValidator } from "@tanstack/zod-form-adapter";
import { z } from "zod";
// ...
const form = useForm({
// Either add the validator here or on `Field`
validator: zodValidator,
// ...
});
{
return (
<>
{/* ... */}
>
);
}}
/>
```
These adapters also support async operations using the proper property names:
```tsx
{
const currentAge = await fetchCurrentAgeOnProfile();
return (
value >= currentAge
);
},
{
message: "You can only increase the age",
},
)}
children={(field) => {
return (
<>
{/* ... */}
>
);
}}
/>
```
## Preventing invalid forms from being submitted
The `onChange`, `onBlur` etc... callbacks are also run when the form is submitted and the submission is blocked if the form is invalid.
The form state object has a `canSubmit` flag that is false when any field is invalid and the form has been touched (`canSubmit` is true until the form has been touched, even if some fields are "technically" invalid based on their `onChange`/`onBlur` props).
You can subscribe to it via `form.Subscribe` and use the value in order to, for example, disable the submit button when the form is invalid (in practice, disabled buttons are not accessible, use `aria-disabled` instead).
```tsx
const form = useForm(/* ... */);
return (
/* ... */
// Dynamic submit button
[state.canSubmit, state.isSubmitting]}
children={([canSubmit, isSubmitting]) => (
)}
/>
);
```