10

Does anyone know if it's possible to accept coupons on a one time transaction with Stripe?

I know you can add coupons with recurring subscriptions but I just want to be able to offer a discount on one time payments.

3 Answers 3

12

I think the idea here is that you are in total control of individual charges (or one-time payments, whatever you want to call them). So, you can create whatever coupon mechanism in your own app for charges. At the end of the day you're just telling Stripe "Charge $X.YZ to this card".

It's a little different for subscriptions because they are more structured data. They rely on a plan, which has a set price.

Hopefully that makes sense, but I agree that it's weird that they don't let you apply a coupon to a single charge.

6

No, not possible. Their documentation states it's only for invoices with subscriptions or invoice items.

https://stripe.com/docs/api?lang=ruby#coupons

1

Applying discount coupons for one-time charges is unnecessary burden for Stripe to maintain. So they do not support this and recommend us to keep the record of discount coupons for one time charges our selves.

Also it does not make much sense. So here is how to do this

  • You have discount coupons already set in the Stripe
  • When your customer submits coupon for one-time charges, you get the amount or %age to wave off
  • and reduce the amount from the price and call Stripe API to charge the discounted amount.
  • You will need to keep track of discounted amount and coupon for such charges your self.

Illustration: Pseudo code

coupon = params[:promo_code]
discounted_amount = coupon.discount_amount
amount_to_charge = actual_price - discounted_amount
Stripe::Charge.create(customer: cust_id, amount_to_charge)

# update the coupon and charge info in local database

For more info see this link

https://stripe.com/docs/recipes/coupons-for-charges

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.