About FCM messages

Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM) offers a broad range of messaging options and capabilities. The information in this page is intended to help you understand the different types of FCM messages and what you can do with them.

Message types

With FCM, you can send two types of messages to clients:

  • Notification messages, sometimes thought of as "display messages." These are handled by the FCM SDK automatically.
  • Data messages, which are handled by the client app.

Notification messages contain a predefined set of user-visible keys. Data messages, by contrast, contain only your user-defined custom key-value pairs. Notification messages can contain an optional data payload. Maximum payload for both message types is 4096 bytes, except when sending messages from the Firebase console, which enforces a 1000 character limit.

Use scenario How to send
Notification message FCM SDK displays the message to end-user devices on behalf of the client app when it's running in the background. Otherwise, if the app is running in the foreground when the notification is received, the app's code determines the behavior. Notification messages have a predefined set of user-visible keys and an optional data payload of custom key-value pairs.
  1. In a trusted environment such as Cloud Functions or your app server, use the Admin SDK or the HTTP v1 API. Set the notification key. May have optional data payload. Always collapsible.

    See some examples of display notifications and send request payloads.

  2. Use the Notifications composer: Enter the Message Text, Title, etc., and send. Add optional data payload by providing Custom data.
Data message Client app is responsible for processing data messages. Data messages have only custom key-value pairs with no reserved key names (see below). In a trusted environment such as Cloud Functions or your app server, use the Admin SDK or the FCM Server Protocols. In the send request, Set the data key.

Use notification messages when you want the FCM SDK to handle displaying a notification automatically when your app is running in the background. Use data messages when you want to process the messages with your own client app code.

FCM can send a notification message including an optional data payload. In such cases, FCM handles displaying the notification payload, and the client app handles the data payload.

Notification messages

For testing or for marketing and user re-engagement, you can send notification messages using the Firebase console. The Firebase console provides analytics-based A/B testing to help you refine and improve marketing messages.

To programmatically send notification messages using the Admin SDK or the FCM protocols, set the notification key with the necessary predefined set of key-value options for the user-visible part of the notification message. For example, here is a JSON-formatted notification message in an IM app. The user can expect to see a message with the title "Portugal vs. Denmark" and the text "great match!" on the device:

{
  "message":{
    "token":"bk3RNwTe3H0:CI2k_HHwgIpoDKCIZvvDMExUdFQ3P1...",
    "notification":{
      "title":"Portugal vs. Denmark",
      "body":"great match!"
    }
  }
}

Notification messages are delivered to the notification tray when the app is in the background. For apps in the foreground, messages are handled by a callback function.

See the HTTP v1 Protocol notification object reference documentation for the full list of predefined keys available for building notification messages.

Data messages

Set the appropriate key with your custom key-value pairs to send a data payload to the client app.

For example, here is a JSON-formatted message in the same IM app as above, where the information is encapsulated in the common data key and the client app is expected to interpret the content:

{
  "message":{
    "token":"bk3RNwTe3H0:CI2k_HHwgIpoDKCIZvvDMExUdFQ3P1...",
    "data":{
      "Nick" : "Mario",
      "body" : "great match!",
      "Room" : "PortugalVSDenmark"
    }
  }
}

The above example shows usage of the top-level, or common data field, which is interpreted by clients on all platforms that receive the message. On each platform, the client app receives the data payload in a callback function.

Encryption for data messages

The Android Transport Layer (see FCM architecture) uses point-to-point encryption. Depending on your needs, you may decide to add end-to-end encryption to data messages. FCM does not provide an end-to-end solution. However, there are external solutions available such as Capillary or DTLS.

Notification messages with optional data payload

Both programmatically or via the Firebase console, you can send notification messages that contain an optional payload of custom key-value pairs. In the Notifications composer, use the Custom data fields in Advanced options.

App behavior when receiving messages that include both notification and data payloads depends on whether the app is in the background or the foreground—essentially, whether or not it is active at the time of receipt.

  • When in the background, apps receive the notification payload in the notification tray, and only handle the data payload when the user taps on the notification.
  • When in the foreground, your app receives a message object with both payloads available.

Here is a JSON-formatted message containing both the notification key and the data key:

{
  "message":{
    "token":"bk3RNwTe3H0:CI2k_HHwgIpoDKCIZvvDMExUdFQ3P1...",
    "notification":{
      "title":"Portugal vs. Denmark",
      "body":"great match!"
    },
    "data" : {
      "Nick" : "Mario",
      "Room" : "PortugalVSDenmark"
    }
  }
}

Customizing a message across platforms

The Firebase Admin SDK and the FCM v1 HTTP protocol both allow your message requests to set all fields available in the message object. This includes:

  • a common set of fields to be interpreted by all app instances that receive the message.
  • platform-specific sets of fields, such as AndroidConfig and WebpushConfig, interpreted only by app instances running on the specified platform.

Platform-specific blocks give you flexibility to customize messages for different platforms to ensure that they are handled correctly when received. The FCM backend will take all specified parameters into account and customize the message for each platform.

When to use common fields

Use common fields when you're:

  • Targeting app instances on all platforms — Apple, Android, and web
  • Sending messages to topics

All app instances, regardless of platform, can interpret the following common fields:

When to use platform-specific fields

Use platform-specific fields when you want to:

  • Send fields only to particular platforms
  • Send platform-specific fields in addition to the common fields

Whenever you want to send values only to particular platforms, don't use common fields; use platform-specific fields. For example, to send a notification only to Apple platforms and web but not to Android, you must use two separate sets of fields, one for Apple and one for web.

When you are sending messages with specific delivery options, use platform-specific fields to set them. You can specify different values per platform if you want. However, even when you want to set essentially the same value across platforms, you must use platform-specific fields. This is because each platform may interpret the value slightly differently—for example, time-to-live is set on Android as an expiration time in seconds, while on Apple it is set as an expiration date.

Example: notification message with platform-specific delivery options

The following v1 send request sends a common notification title and content to all platforms, but also sends some platform-specific overrides. Specifically, the request:

  • sets a long time-to-live for Android and Web platforms, while setting the APNs (Apple platforms) message priority to a low setting
  • sets the appropriate keys to define the result of a user tap on the notification on Android and Apple — click_action, and category, respectively.
{
  "message":{
     "token":"bk3RNwTe3H0:CI2k_HHwgIpoDKCIZvvDMExUdFQ3P1...",
     "notification":{
       "title":"Match update",
       "body":"Arsenal goal in added time, score is now 3-0"
     },
     "android":{
       "ttl":"86400s",
       "notification"{
         "click_action":"OPEN_ACTIVITY_1"
       }
     },
     "apns": {
       "headers": {
         "apns-priority": "5",
       },
       "payload": {
         "aps": {
           "category": "NEW_MESSAGE_CATEGORY"
         }
       }
     },
     "webpush":{
       "headers":{
         "TTL":"86400"
       }
     }
   }
 }

See the HTTP v1 reference documentation for complete detail on the keys available in platform-specific blocks in the message body. For more information about building send requests that contain the message body, see Build Send Requests.

Delivery options

FCM provides a specific set of delivery options for messages sent to Android devices, and allows for similar options on Apple platforms and web. For example, "collapsible" message behavior is supported on Android via FCM's collapse_key, on Apple via apns-collapse-id, and on JavaScript/Web via Topic. For details, see descriptions in this section and related reference documentation.

Non-collapsible and collapsible messages

A non-collapsible message denotes that each individual message is delivered to the device. A non-collapsible message delivers some useful content, as opposed to a collapsible message like a content-free "ping" to the mobile app to contact the server to fetch data.

Some typical use cases of non-collapsible messages are chat messages or critical messages. For example, in an IM app, you would want to deliver every message, because every message has different content.

For Android there is a limit of 100 messages that can be stored without collapsing. If the limit is reached, all stored messages are discarded. When the device is back online, it receives a special message indicating that the limit was reached. The app can then handle the situation properly, typically by requesting a full sync from the app server.

A collapsible message is a message that may be replaced by a new message if it has yet to be delivered to the device.

A common use cases of collapsible messages are messages used to tell a mobile app to sync data from the server. An example would be a sports app that updates users with the latest score. Only the most recent message is relevant.

To mark a message as collapsible on Android, include the collapse_key parameter in the message payload. By default, the collapse key is the app package name registered in the Firebase console. The FCM server can simultaneously store four different collapsible messages per device, each with a different collapse key. If you exceed this number, FCM only keeps four collapse keys, with no guarantees about which ones are kept.

Topic messages with no payload are collapsible by default. Notification messages are always collapsible and will ignore the collapse_key parameter.

Which should I use?

Collapsible messages are a better choice from a performance standpoint, provided your app doesn't need to use non-collapsible messages. However, if you use collapsible messages, remember that FCM only allows a maximum of four different collapse keys to be used by FCM per registration token at any given time. You must not exceed this number, or it could cause unpredictable consequences.

Use scenario How to send
Non-collapsible Every message is important to the client app and needs to be delivered. Except for notification messages, all messages are non-collapsible by default.
Collapsible When there is a newer message that renders an older, related message irrelevant to the client app, FCM replaces the older message. For example: messages used to initiate a data sync from the server, or outdated notification messages. Set the appropriate parameter in your message request:
  • collapseKey on Android
  • apns-collapse-id on Apple
  • Topic on Web
  • collapse_key in legacy protocols (all platforms)

Setting the priority of a message

You have two options for assigning delivery priority to downstream messages: normal and high priority. Though the behavior differs slightly across platforms, delivery of normal and high priority messages works like this:

  • Normal priority. Normal priority messages are delivered immediately when the app is in the foreground. For backgrounded apps, delivery may be delayed. For less time-sensitive messages, such as notifications of new email, keeping your UI in sync, or syncing app data in the background, choose normal delivery priority.

  • High priority. FCM attempts to deliver high priority messages immediately even if the device is in Doze mode. High priority messages are for time-sensitive, user visible content.

Here is an example of a normal priority message sent via the FCM HTTP v1 protocol to notify a magazine subscriber that new content is available to download:

{
  "message":{
    "topic":"subscriber-updates",
    "notification":{
      "body" : "This week's edition is now available.",
      "title" : "NewsMagazine.com",
    },
    "data" : {
      "volume" : "3.21.15",
      "contents" : "http://www.news-magazine.com/world-week/21659772"
    },
    "android":{
      "priority":"normal"
    },
    "apns":{
      "headers":{
        "apns-priority":"5"
      }
    },
    "webpush": {
      "headers": {
        "Urgency": "high"
      }
    }
  }
}

For more platform-specific detail on setting message priority:

Life critical use cases

The FCM APIs are not designed for emergency alerts or other high-risk activities where the use or failure of the APIs could result in death, personal injury, or environmental damage (such as the operation of nuclear facilities, air traffic control, or life support systems). Any such use is expressly prohibited under Section 4. a. 7 of the Terms of Service. You are solely responsible for managing your app's compliance with the Terms, and any damages resulting from your noncompliance. Google provides the APIs "as is," and reserves the right to discontinue the APIs or any portion or feature or your access thereto, for any reason and at any time, without liability or other obligation to you or your users.

Setting the lifespan of a message

FCM usually delivers messages immediately after they are sent. However, this might not always be possible. For example, if the platform is Android, the device could be turned off, offline, or otherwise unavailable. Or FCM might intentionally delay messages to prevent an app from consuming excessive resources and negatively affecting battery life.

When this happens, FCM stores the message and delivers it as soon as it's feasible. While this is fine in most cases, there are some apps for which a late message might as well never be delivered. For example, if the message is an incoming call or video chat notification, it is meaningful only for a short period of time before the call is terminated. Or if the message is an invitation to an event, it is useless if received after the event has ended.

On Android and Web/JavaScript, you can specify the maximum lifespan of a message. The value must be a duration from 0 to 2,419,200 seconds (28 days), and it corresponds to the maximum period of time for which FCM stores and attempts to deliver the message. Requests that don't contain this field default to the maximum period of four weeks.

Here are some possible uses for this feature:

  • Video chat incoming calls
  • Expiring invitation events
  • Calendar events

Another advantage of specifying the lifespan of a message is that FCM doesn't apply collapsible message throttling to messages with a time-to-live value of 0 seconds. FCM provides best effort handling of messages that must be delivered "now or never." Keep in mind that a time_to_live value of 0 means messages that can't be delivered immediately are discarded. However, because such messages are never stored, this provides the best latency for sending notification messages.

Here is an example of a request that includes TTL:

{
  "message":{
    "token":"bk3RNwTe3H0:CI2k_HHwgIpoDKCIZvvDMExUdFQ3P1...",
    "data":{
      "Nick" : "Mario",
      "body" : "great match!",
      "Room" : "PortugalVSDenmark"
    },
    "apns":{
      "headers":{
        "apns-expiration":"1604750400"
      }
    },
    "android":{
      "ttl":"4500s"
    },
    "webpush":{
      "headers":{
        "TTL":"4500"
      }
    }
  }
}

Lifetime of a message

When an app server posts a message to FCM and receives a message ID back, it does not mean that the message was already delivered to the device. Rather, it means that it was accepted for delivery. What happens to the message after it is accepted depends on many factors.

In the best-case scenario, if the device is connected to FCM, the screen is on and there are no throttling restrictions, the message is delivered right away.

If the device is connected but in Doze, a low priority message is stored by FCM until the device is out of Doze. And that's where the collapse_key flag plays a role: if there is already a message with the same collapse key (and registration token) stored and waiting for delivery, the old message is discarded and the new message takes its place (that is, the old message is collapsed by the new one). However, if the collapse key is not set, both the new and old messages are stored for future delivery.

If the device is not connected to FCM, the message is stored until a connection is established (again respecting the collapse key rules). When a connection is established, FCM delivers all pending messages to the device. If the device never gets connected again (for instance, if it was factory reset), the message eventually times out and is discarded from FCM storage. The default timeout is four weeks, unless the time_to_live flag is set.

To get more insight into the delivery of a message:

    To get more insight into the delivery of messages on Android or Apple platforms, see the FCM reporting dashboard, which records the number of messages sent and opened on Apple and Android devices, along with data for "impressions" (notifications seen by users) for Android apps.

For Android devices with direct channel messaging enabled, if the device has not connected to FCM for more than one month, FCM still accepts the message but immediately discards it. If the device connects within four weeks of the last data message you sent to it, your client receives the onDeletedMessages() callback. The app can then handle the situation properly, typically by requesting a full sync from the app server.

Finally, when FCM attempts to deliver a message to the device and the app was uninstalled, FCM discards that message right away and invalidates the registration token. Future attempts to send a message to that device results in a NotRegistered error.

Throttling and quotas

Our goal is to always deliver every message sent via FCM. However, delivering every message sometimes results in a poor overall user experience. In other cases, we need to provide boundaries to ensure that FCM provides a scalable service for all senders. The types of limits and quotas described in this section help us balance these important factors.

Downstream message throttling

The HTTP v1 API introduced per-project, per-minute quotas for downstream messaging. The default quota of 600k messages per minute covers over 99% of FCM developers while protecting the stability of the system and minimizing the impact of spiky projects.

Spiky traffic patterns can result in quota exceeded errors. In an over quota scenario, the system serves HTTP status code 429 (QUOTA_EXCEEDED) until the quota is refilled in the following minute. 429 responses may also be returned in overload situations, so you are strongly encouraged to handle 429s according to published recommendations.

Note that:

  • The downstream quota measures messages, not requests.
  • Client errors (HTTP status code 400-499) are counted (excluding 429s).
  • Quotas are per-minute, but these minutes are not aligned to the clock.

Monitoring quota

You can view quota, usage, and errors on the Google Cloud Console:

  1. Go to the Google Cloud console
  2. Select APIs & services
  3. From the table list, select Firebase Cloud Messaging API
  4. Select QUOTA & SYSTEM LIMITS.

NOTE: These graphs are not precisely time aligned with quota minutes, meaning 429s may be served when traffic appears to be below quota.

Requesting a quota increase

Before requesting a quota increase, ensure that:

  • Your usage is regularly ≥ 80% of quota for at least 5 consecutive minutes per day.
  • You have < 5% client error ratio, especially during peak traffic.
  • You adhere to the best practices for sending messages at scale.

If you meet these criteria, you can submit a quota increase request for up to +25% and FCM will make every practical effort to fulfill the request (no increase can be guaranteed).

If you need more downstream messaging quota due to an impending launch or temporary event, request your quota at least 15 days in advance to allow sufficient time to handle the request. For large requests (>18M messages per minute), at least 30 days of notice is required. Launches and special event requests are still subject to the client error ratio and best practices requirements.

See also the FAQ about FCM quotas.

Topic message limit

The topic subscription add/remove rate is limited to 3,000 QPS per project.

For message sending rates, see Fanout Throttling.

Fanout throttling

Message fanout is the process of sending a message to multiple devices, such as when you target topics and groups, or when you use the Notifications composer to target audiences or user segments.

Message fanout is not instantaneous and so occasionally you have multiple fanouts in progress concurrently. We limit the number of concurrent message fanouts per project to 1,000. After that, we may reject additional fanout requests or defer the fanout of the requests until some of the already in progress fanouts complete.

The actual achievable fanout rate is influenced by the number of projects requesting fanouts at the same time. A fanout rate of 10,000 QPS for an individual project is not uncommon, but that number is not a guarantee and is a result of the total load on the system. It is important to note that the available fanout capacity is divided among projects and not across fanout requests. So, if your project has two fanouts in progress, then each fanout will only see half of the available fanout rate. The recommended way to maximize your fanout speed is to only have one active fanout in progress at a time.

Collapsible message throttling

As described above, collapsible messages are content-free notifications designed to collapse on top of each other. In the event that a developer is repeating the same message to an app too frequently, we delay (throttle) messages to reduce the impact on a user’s battery.

For example, if you send large numbers of new email sync requests to a single device, we might delay the next email sync request a few minutes so that the device can sync at a lower average rate. This throttling is done strictly to limit the battery impact experienced by the user.

If your use case requires high burst send patterns, then non-collapsible messages may be the right choice. For such messages, make sure to include the content in such messages in order to reduce the battery cost.

We limit collapsible messages to a burst of 20 messages per app per device, with a refill of 1 message every 3 minutes.

XMPP server throttling

We limit the rate that you can connect to FCM XMPP servers to 400 connections per minute per project. This shouldn't be an issue for message delivery, but it is important for ensuring the stability of the system. For each project, FCM allows 2500 connections in parallel.

For upstream messaging with XMPP, FCM limits upstream messages at 1,500,000/minute per project to avoid overloading upstream destination servers.

We limit upstream messages per device at 1,000/minute to protect against battery drain from bad app behavior.

Maximum message rate to a single device

For Android, you can send up to 240 messages/minute and 5,000 messages/hour to a single device. This high threshold is meant to allow for short term bursts of traffic, such as when users are interacting rapidly over chat. This limit prevents errors in sending logic from inadvertently draining the battery on a device.

For iOS, we return an error when the rate exceeds APNs limits.

FCM ports and your firewall

If your organization has a firewall to restrict traffic to or from the Internet, you need to configure it to allow mobile devices to connect with FCM in order for devices on your network to receive messages. FCM typically uses port 5228, but it sometimes uses 443, 5229, and 5230.

For devices connecting on your network, FCM doesn't provide specific IPs because our IP range changes too frequently and your firewall rules could get out of date, impacting your users' experience. Ideally, allowlist ports 5228-5230 & 443 with no IP restrictions. However, if you must have an IP restriction, you should allowlist all of the IP addresses listed in goog.json. This large list is updated regularly, and you are recommended to update your rules on a monthly basis. Problems caused by firewall IP restrictions are often intermittent and difficult to diagnose.

We do offer a set of domain names that can be allowlisted instead of IP addresses. Those hostnames are listed below. If we start using additional hostnames, we will update the list here. Using domain names for your firewall rule may or may not be functional in your firewall device.

TCP ports to open:

  • 5228
  • 5229
  • 5230
  • 443

Hostnames to open:

  • mtalk.google.com
  • mtalk4.google.com
  • mtalk-staging.google.com
  • mtalk-dev.google.com
  • alt1-mtalk.google.com
  • alt2-mtalk.google.com
  • alt3-mtalk.google.com
  • alt4-mtalk.google.com
  • alt5-mtalk.google.com
  • alt6-mtalk.google.com
  • alt7-mtalk.google.com
  • alt8-mtalk.google.com
  • android.apis.google.com
  • device-provisioning.googleapis.com
  • firebaseinstallations.googleapis.com

Network Address Translation and/or Stateful Packet Inspection firewalls:

If your network implements Network Address Translation (NAT) or Stateful Packet Inspection (SPI), implement a 30 minute or larger timeout for our connections over ports 5228-5230. This enables us to provide reliable connectivity while reducing the battery consumption of your users' mobile devices.

VPN interactions and bypassability

Firebase Cloud Messaging takes various steps to ensure that the push messaging connection from the phone to the server is reliable and available as often as possible. The use of a VPN complicates this effort.

VPNs mask the underlying information that FCM needs to tune its connection to maximize reliability & battery life. In some cases VPNs actively break long lived connections resulting in a bad user experience due to missed or delayed messages or a high battery cost. When the VPN is configured to allow us to do so, we bypass the VPN using an encrypted connection (over the base network wifi or LTE) so as to ensure a reliable, battery friendly experience. FCM's usage of bypassable VPNs is specific to the FCM Push Notification channel. Other FCM traffic, such as registration traffic, uses the VPN if it is active. When the FCM connection bypasses the VPN it loses additional benefits the VPN may provide, such as IP masking.

Different VPNs will have different methods for controlling whether or not it can be bypassed. Consult the documentation for your specific VPN for instructions.

If the VPN is not configured to be bypassable then Firebase Cloud Messaging will use the VPN network in order to connect to the server. This may result in periods of time where messages are delayed and may result in more battery usage as Cloud Messaging works to maintain the connection over the VPN connection.

Credentials

Depending on which FCM features you implement, you may need the following credentials from your Firebase project:

Project ID A unique identifier for your Firebase project, used in requests to the FCM v1 HTTP endpoint. This value is available in the Firebase console Settings pane.
Registration token

A unique token string that identifies each client app instance. The registration token is required for single device and device group messaging. Note that registration tokens must be kept secret.

Sender ID A unique numerical value created when you create your Firebase project, available in the Cloud Messaging tab of the Firebase console Settings pane. The sender ID is used to identify each sender that can send messages to the client app.
Access token A short-lived OAuth 2.0 token that authorizes requests to the HTTP v1 API. This token is associated with a service account that belongs to your Firebase project. To create and rotate access tokens, follow the steps described in Authorize Send Requests.
Server key (for **deprecated** legacy protocols)

A server key that authorizes your app server for access to Google services, including sending messages via the deprecated Firebase Cloud Messaging legacy protocols.

Important: Do not include the server key anywhere in your client code. Also, make sure to use only server keys to authorize your app server. Android, Apple platform, and browser keys are rejected by FCM.