Custom validation

You can add runtime validation for your user input for Prisma Client queries in one of the following ways:

You can use any validation library you'd like. The Node.js ecosystem offers a number of high-quality, easy-to-use validation libraries to choose from including: , , , and .

Input validation with Prisma Client extensions

This example adds runtime validation when creating and updating values using a Zod schema to check that the data passed to Prisma Client is valid.

Query extensions do not currently work for nested operations. In this example, validations are only run on the top level data object passed to methods such as prisma.product.create(). Validations implemented this way do not automatically run for nested writes.

Prisma Client extension
Prisma schema
import { PrismaClient, Prisma } from '@prisma/client'
import { z } from 'zod'
/**
* Zod schema
*/
export const ProductCreateInput = z.object({
slug: z
.string()
.max(100)
.regex(/^[a-z0-9]+(?:-[a-z0-9]+)*$/),
name: z.string().max(100),
description: z.string().max(1000),
price: z
.instanceof(Prisma.Decimal)
.refine((price) => price.gte('0.01') && price.lt('1000000.00')),
}) satisfies z.Schema<Prisma.ProductUncheckedCreateInput>
/**
* Prisma Client Extension
*/
const prisma = new PrismaClient().$extends({
query: {
product: {
create({ args, query }) {
args.data = ProductCreateInput.parse(args.data)
return query(args)
},
update({ args, query }) {
args.data = ProductCreateInput.partial().parse(args.data)
return query(args)
},
updateMany({ args, query }) {
args.data = ProductCreateInput.partial().parse(args.data)
return query(args)
},
upsert({ args, query }) {
args.create = ProductCreateInput.parse(args.create)
args.update = ProductCreateInput.partial().parse(args.update)
return query(args)
},
},
},
})
async function main() {
/**
* Example usage
*/
// Valid product
const product = await prisma.product.create({
data: {
slug: 'example-product',
name: 'Example Product',
description: 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet',
price: new Prisma.Decimal('10.95'),
},
})
// Invalid product
try {
await prisma.product.create({
data: {
slug: 'invalid-product',
name: 'Invalid Product',
description: 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet',
price: new Prisma.Decimal('-1.00'),
},
})
} catch (err: any) {
console.log(err?.cause?.issues)
}
}
main()

The above example uses a Zod schema to validate and parse data provided in a query at runtime before a record is written to the database.

Input validation with a custom validation function

Here's an example using to validate that the data needed to signup a new user is correct:

import { PrismaClient, Prisma, User } from '@prisma/client'
import { assert, object, string, size, refine } from 'superstruct'
import isEmail from 'isemail'
const prisma = new PrismaClient()
// Runtime validation
const Signup = object({
// string and a valid email address
email: refine(string(), 'email', (v) => isEmail.validate(v)),
// password is between 7 and 30 characters long
password: size(string(), 7, 30),
// first name is between 2 and 50 characters long
firstName: size(string(), 2, 50),
// last name is between 2 and 50 characters long
lastName: size(string(), 2, 50),
})
type Signup = Omit<Prisma.UserCreateArgs['data'], 'id'>
// Signup function
async function signup(input: Signup): Promise<User> {
// Assert that input conforms to Signup, throwing with a helpful
// error message if input is invalid.
assert(input, Signup)
return prisma.user.create({
data: input.user,
})
}

The example above shows how you can create a custom type-safe signup function that ensures the input is valid before creating a user.

Going further

  • Learn how you can use Prisma Client extensions to add input validation for your queries — .
  • Learn how you can organize your code better by moving the signup function into a custom model.
  • There's an to bake user validation into Prisma Client. If you'd like to see that happen, make sure to upvote that issue and share your use case!