Embedded Elements
The Google Pay™ Element allows you to offer Google Pay checkout option on your website. Shoppers can click the Google Pay button and pay using facial or fingerprint recognition.
This page describes how to embed a Google Pay Element on your payment page to accept payments.
How it works
The diagram below depicts the information flow in a Google Pay Element integration.
Before you begin
Before you implement the integration, consider the following:
Contact your Airwallex Account Manager to enable payment acceptance using Embedded Elements for your merchant account.
Ensure that your merchant account is enabled for Google Pay. For more information, see Enable Google Pay
Obtain your access token API by authenticating to Airwallex using your unique Client ID and API key. You will need the access token to make API calls.
Explore the
airwallex-payment-elements
JavaScript client library reference JS to familiarize yourself with the Embedded Elements methods, parameters, and properties.Install the
airwallex-payment-elements
package using Yarn or NPMyarn add airwallex-payment-elements
npm install airwallex-payment-elements
Step 1: Set up the server to create a PaymentIntent
When the shopper begins the checkout process, you will need to create a PaymentIntent object to indicate your intent to collect payment from the shopper.
When the checkout page loads, on your server, call Create a PaymentIntent API API with an amount and currency. Always decide how much to charge on the server side, a trusted environment, as opposed to the client. This prevents malicious shoppers from being able to alter the payment amount.
Provide return_url
in Create a PaymentIntent API to indicate where Airwallex should redirect the shopper after completing the payment, whether successful or otherwise.
The PaymentIntent’s id
and client_secret
are returned in the response — these parameters let you confirm the payment and update card details on the client, without allowing manipulation of sensitive information, like payment amount.
Step 2: Initialize Airwallex on your checkout page
First, you will need to import the airwallex-payment-elements
SDK and then initialize the package. For details, see Initialize Airwallex JS.
Step 3: Add the Google Pay Element to your checkout page
To embed the Google Pay Element JS into your checkout page, you will need to create an empty container, create the Element and then mount the Element to the container.
Define the payment form
First, create an empty container div
with a unique id in your payment form. Ensure that the payment form only contains one Element with this unique id. Airwallex inserts an iframe into this div
on mounting the Element.
Create the Google Pay Element
When the payment form has loaded, call createElement(type, options)
by specifying the Element type as googlePayButton
to create the Element. Ensure that the payment form only contains one Element with googlePayButton
id.
Mount the Google Pay Element
Call mount()
with the id of the div
to mount the Element to the DOM. This creates the Google Pay button. The Element should only be mounted once in a single payment flow.
Add onReady
event listener to ensure the Element is mounted. Use this event to prepare and load the checkout page.
Google Pay props
You can also pass options
in createElement()
to overwrite styles and other functions as shown in the following table. For details, see googlePayButton props JS.
Step 4: Handle the response
Add onSuccess
and onError
event listeners to handle error and success events received from Airwallex.
If no error occurred, display a message that the payment was successful. If payment fails with an error, display the appropriate message to your shopper so they can take action and try again.
Retrieve the payment result
For any actions subsequent to the payment such as shipping goods or sending email receipts, you can retrieve the payment result using the following options:
Set up webhooks to receive notifications on whether the payment has succeeded. Airwallex sends
payment_intent.succeeded
event when a payment succeeds. Listen to these events rather than waiting on a callback from the client. On the client, the shopper could close the browser window or quit the app before the callback executes. For information on how to set up webhooks and listen to events, see Getting started with webhooksOn your server, call Retrieve a PaymentIntent API to check the PaymentIntent status.
Check Payment Activity screen on your Airwallex web app.
Other methods
After calling createElement( )
, you can perform the following operations on the Element.
Method | Description |
---|---|
update(options) | Use this method to update the Element’s options after creating the Element. |
getElement(type) | Use this method to query the created Element by type. |
destroyElement(type) | Use this method to destroy the created Element. The element can no longer be accessed after this call. The call returns a boolean to indicate the success or failure of the call. |
Test your integration
Perform transaction tests in the production environment as described in the go-live checklist to ensure your integration is working correctly.
Supported features
You can add the following features to your Embedded Element integration.
Localization
You can configure the Element to display localized text of the payment fields based on the locale
set in init()
or loadAirwallex( )
. See supported locales JS.
Device fingerprinting
Device fingerprinting uniquely tracks and identifies devices used for transacting on your shopping site, increasing your protection from fraud. The airwallex-payment-elements
JavaScript client library automatically handles device fingerprinting, so no additional integration is needed.
Subscription payments
Airwallex allows you to create a PaymentConsent with the shopper to initiate future payments using shopper’s saved payments details. For more information, see Save payment details for future payments. You need to add additional information about the order & terms of the payment to display this information on the payment sheet.
- See below example to understand how to setup recurring with Google Pay without payment
- See below example to understand how to setup recurring with Google Pay with payment
FAQ
What are the common error scenarios with Embedded Elements integration?
Some common error scenarios include :
Error | Next steps |
---|---|
Airwallex is not defined | Check if you have initialized Airwallex (Step 2) before using Airwallex functions. If you are using CDN, check if you have changed the bundle version from x.x.x to the latest version in the package.json file. For example, https://checkout.airwallex.com/assets/elements.bundle.min.js is invalid |
Access denied, authentication failed | Check if you have replaced your intent id and client_secret in createElement() and optionally confirmPaymentIntent() . |
The PaymentIntent with ID int_xxxxxxxxx cannot be found | Check if the environment you initialized Airwallex in, for example, demo or prod, matches the environment you retrieved your intent id and client_secret from. In other words, if you ran init in the demo environment, you must also create your PaymentIntent in the demo environment. |
InvalidAccessError: Page already has an active payment session | ApplePay doesn't allow duplicate sessions in the same page. However, you may create the apple pay element multiple times, please follow either of the options listed to address the error: 1) Call the destroy function to destroy old element before you create the new element. 2) Call the update function to update the old element with new intentId. |