Login with Bitbucket
To enable Bitbucket Auth for your project, you need to set up a Bitbucket OAuth application and add the application credentials to your Supabase Dashboard.
Overview
Setting up Bitbucket logins for your application consists of 3 parts:
- Create and configure a Bitbucket OAuth Consumer on Bitbucket
- Add your Bitbucket OAuth Consumer keys to your Supabase Project
- Add the login code to your Supabase JS Client App
Access your Bitbucket account
- Go to bitbucket.org.
- Click on
Loginat the top right to log in.

Find your callback URL
The next step requires a callback URL, which looks like this: https://<project-ref>.supabase.co/auth/v1/callback
- Go to your Supabase Project Dashboard
- Click on the
Authenticationicon in the left sidebar - Click on
Providersunder the Configuration section - Click on Bitbucket from the accordion list to expand and you'll find your Callback URL, you can click
Copyto copy it to the clipboard
For testing OAuth locally with the Supabase CLI see the local development docs.
Create a Bitbucket OAuth app
- Click on your profile icon at the bottom left
- Click on
All Workspaces - Select a workspace and click on it to select it
- Click on
Settingson the left - Click on
OAuth consumerson the left underApps and Features(near the bottom) - Click
Add Consumerat the top - Enter the name of your app under
Name - In
Callback URL, type the callback URL of your app - Check the permissions you need (Email, Read should be enough)
- Click
Saveat the bottom - Click on your app name (the name of your new OAuth Consumer)
- Copy your
Key(client_key) andSecret(client_secret) codes
Add your Bitbucket credentials into your Supabase project
- Go to your Supabase Project Dashboard
- In the left sidebar, click the
Authenticationicon (near the top) - Click on
Providersunder the Configuration section - Click on BitBucket from the accordion list to expand and turn BitBucket Enabled to ON
- Enter your BitBucket Client ID and BitBucket Client Secret saved in the previous step
- Click
Save
Add login code to your client app
Make sure you're using the right supabase client in the following code.
If you're not using Server-Side Rendering or cookie-based Auth, you can directly use the createClient from @supabase/supabase-js. If you're using Server-Side Rendering, see the Server-Side Auth guide for instructions on creating your Supabase client.
When your user signs in, call signInWithOAuth() with bitbucket as the provider:
123456789101112import { createClient } from '@supabase/supabase-js'const supabase = createClient( 'https://your-project-id.supabase.co', 'sb_publishable_... or anon key')// ---cut---async function signInWithBitbucket() { const { data, error } = await supabase.auth.signInWithOAuth({ provider: 'bitbucket', })}For a PKCE flow, for example in Server-Side Auth, you need an extra step to handle the code exchange. When calling signInWithOAuth, provide a redirectTo URL which points to a callback route. This redirect URL should be added to your redirect allow list.
In the browser, signInWithOAuth automatically redirects to the OAuth provider's authentication endpoint, which then redirects to your endpoint.
1234567891011import { createClient, type Provider } from '@supabase/supabase-js';const supabase = createClient('url', 'anonKey')const provider = 'provider' as Provider// ---cut---await supabase.auth.signInWithOAuth({ provider, options: { redirectTo: `http://example.com/auth/callback`, },})At the callback endpoint, handle the code exchange to save the user session.
Create a new file at app/auth/callback/route.ts and populate with the following:
app/auth/callback/route.ts
12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334import { NextResponse } from 'next/server'// The client you created from the Server-Side Auth instructionsimport { createClient } from '@/utils/supabase/server'export async function GET(request: Request) { const { searchParams, origin } = new URL(request.url) const code = searchParams.get('code') // if "next" is in param, use it as the redirect URL let next = searchParams.get('next') ?? '/' if (!next.startsWith('/')) { // if "next" is not a relative URL, use the default next = '/' } if (code) { const supabase = await createClient() const { error } = await supabase.auth.exchangeCodeForSession(code) if (!error) { const forwardedHost = request.headers.get('x-forwarded-host') // original origin before load balancer const isLocalEnv = process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development' if (isLocalEnv) { // we can be sure that there is no load balancer in between, so no need to watch for X-Forwarded-Host return NextResponse.redirect(`${origin}${next}`) } else if (forwardedHost) { return NextResponse.redirect(`https://${forwardedHost}${next}`) } else { return NextResponse.redirect(`${origin}${next}`) } } } // return the user to an error page with instructions return NextResponse.redirect(`${origin}/auth/auth-code-error`)}When your user signs out, call signOut() to remove them from the browser session and any objects from localStorage:
12345678910import { createClient } from '@supabase/supabase-js'const supabase = createClient( 'https://your-project-id.supabase.co', 'sb_publishable_... or anon key')// ---cut---async function signOut() { const { error } = await supabase.auth.signOut()}