182

I'm using Laravel. I want to disable registration for new users but I need the login to work.

How can I disable the registration forms, routes, and controllers?

4
  • Just remove the register-related methods from your routes.php file. Don’t override the methods with blank ones—it’s a horrible and hack-y approach as you’ve then got to re-add the bodies if you decide to re-enable that feature in the future. Dec 22, 2015 at 23:41
  • 1
    @MartinBean there are no routes in routes.php. To enable the authentication functions, all you do is add Route::auth(); to the file.
    – miken32
    May 26, 2016 at 21:23
  • @miken32 My comment was from over five months ago, before the Route::auth() shortcut was advocated. May 27, 2016 at 8:17
  • 5
    if you are in laravel 5.5 and above Auth::routes(['register' => false]); in web.php
    – ManojKiran
    Feb 26, 2019 at 16:01

31 Answers 31

333

Laravel 5.7 introduced the following functionality:

Auth::routes(['register' => false]);

The currently possible options here are:

Auth::routes([
  'register' => false, // Registration Routes...
  'reset' => false, // Password Reset Routes...
  'verify' => false, // Email Verification Routes...
]);

For older Laravel versions just override showRegistrationForm() and register() methods in

  • AuthController for Laravel 5.0 - 5.4
  • Auth/RegisterController.php for Laravel 5.5
public function showRegistrationForm()
{
    return redirect('login');
}

public function register()
{

}
11
  • 7
    It might be wise to also change the create() function to: throw new Exception('Registration not possible');
    – the JinX
    Apr 13, 2016 at 14:31
  • 2
    or you can add abort(404) on function register() May 23, 2016 at 9:04
  • 3
    I wouldn’t advocate this approach, as overloading code to remove a feature is never a good thing. Just don’t register the registration-related routes. May 27, 2016 at 8:18
  • 4
    For Laravel 5.5, put this in Auth/RegisterController.php
    – kapoko
    Sep 19, 2017 at 12:23
  • 7
    In Laravel 5.7 showRegistrationForm() function is in vendor folder, technically it's not recommended to edit files in vendor folder. Basically what I recommend is to remove register route from web.php. You can simply say Auth::routes(['register' => false]) in web.php file. Cheers! Mar 7, 2019 at 3:27
68

This might be new in 5.7, but there is now an options array to the auth method. Simply changing

Auth::routes();

to

Auth::routes(['register' => false]);

in your routes file after running php artisan make:auth will disable user registration.

3
  • 1
    Thanks for this, I don't know since which version it exists, but I think it is the right path for disabling registration part ! Oct 11, 2018 at 14:45
  • It was added in 5.7.
    – Džuris
    Nov 5, 2018 at 13:20
  • Disable Register Route in Laravel 7 / 8 May 22, 2021 at 6:16
56

If you're using Laravel 5.2 and you installed the auth related functionality with php artisan make:auth then your app/Http/routes.php file will include all auth-related routes by simply calling Route::auth().

The auth() method can be found in vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Routing/Router.php. So if you want to do as some people suggest here and disable registration by removing unwanted routes (probably a good idea) then you have to copy the routes you still want from the auth() method and put them in app/Http/routes.php (replacing the call to Route::auth()). So for instance:

<?php
// This is app/Http/routes.php

// Authentication Routes...
Route::get('login', 'Auth\AuthController@showLoginForm');
Route::post('login', 'Auth\AuthController@login');
Route::get('logout', 'Auth\AuthController@logout');

// Registration Routes... removed!

// Password Reset Routes...
Route::get('password/reset/{token?}', 'Auth\PasswordController@showResetForm');
Route::post('password/email', 'Auth\PasswordController@sendResetLinkEmail');
Route::post('password/reset', 'Auth\PasswordController@reset');

If you're using lower version than 5.2 then it's probably different, I remember things changed quite a bit since 5.0, at some point artisan make:auth was even removed IIRC.

5
  • Instead of remove the registration routes, is it possible to enable them only for a particular type of users?
    – Sefran2
    Jun 23, 2016 at 18:02
  • @Sefran2 You can achieve this by associating groups with middleware. Check out laravel.com/docs/5.2/routing#route-groups
    – Rafał G.
    Jun 24, 2016 at 6:08
  • First of all, I tried Route::group(['middleware' => 'auth'], function () { Route::get('register', 'Auth\AuthController@showRegistrationForm'); Route::post('register', 'Auth\AuthController@register'); });, but when the logged user requests /register he is redirected to /
    – Sefran2
    Jun 24, 2016 at 9:44
  • 1
    @Sefran2 That's because AuthController calls (via other classes and traits, it's a little convoluted) the middleware App\Http\Middleware\RedirectIfAuthenticated. And that middleware redirects you to / if you're already logged in. Which makes sense, why would you want to register if you're logged in? :-) If you want to only allow some routes to some types of users, you'll need to create your own middleware instead of ['middleware' => 'auth']
    – Rafał G.
    Jun 24, 2016 at 12:40
  • 2
    For 5.3 they are different once again, but can still be found in vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Routing/Router.php
    – Matthieu
    Sep 2, 2016 at 10:12
38

For Laravel 5.3 and 5.4, here is the proper way to do it:

You have to change:

public function __construct()
    {
        $this->middleware('guest');
    }

to

public function __construct()
    {
        $this->middleware('auth');
    }

in app/Http/Controller/Auth/RegisterController.php

5
  • 1
    nice job! I think this way also protects from POST request for creating user via post? Mar 10, 2017 at 10:42
  • 3
    this will allow registered users to see the registration page which you would not want
    – ahmed
    Jul 20, 2017 at 16:56
  • 2
    Use middleware("auth") then middleware("guest") to bypass registration page for everyone Aug 6, 2017 at 21:34
  • 1
    then a auth user can register a new user in this case. Feb 18, 2019 at 15:02
  • Yes this is the only proper way for anything below 5.7 .. how is this not the selected answer Jun 4, 2020 at 0:43
38

As of Laravel 5.7 you can pass an array of options to Auth::routes(). You can then disable the register routes with:

Auth::routes(['register' => false]);

You can see how this works from the source code: src/Illuminate/Routing/Router.php.

1
  • 1
    In my opinion, this is the correct answer. Nice found! Mar 6, 2019 at 14:11
27

Method 1 for version 5.3

In laravel 5.3 don't have AuthController. to disable register route you should change in constructor of RegisterController like this:

You can change form:

public function __construct()
{

    $this->middleware('guest');

}

to:

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Redirect;

public function __construct()
{

    Redirect::to('/')->send();

}

Note: for use Redirect don't forget to user Redirect; So user access to https://host_name/register it's redirect to "/".

Method 2 for version 5.3

When we use php artisan make:auth it's added Auth::route(); automatically. Please Override Route in /routes/web.php. You can change it's like this: * you need to comment this line: Auth::routes();

    <?php

/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Web Routes
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This file is where you may define all of the routes that are handled
| by your application. Just tell Laravel the URIs it should respond
| to using a Closure or controller method. Build something great!
|
*/


// Auth::routes();
Route::get('/login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm' );
Route::post('/login', 'Auth\LoginController@login');
Route::post('/logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout');

Route::get('/home', 'HomeController@index');

Thanks! I hope it's can solve your problems.

2
  • I would add route names like specified in vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Routing/Router.php Route::get('login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm')->name('login'); Route::post('login', 'Auth\LoginController@login'); Route::post('logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout')->name('logout'); Dec 20, 2016 at 15:32
  • Redirect class missed on the first method, but changing to $this->middleware('auth'); - works! Mar 10, 2017 at 10:40
15

Set Register route false in your web.php.

Auth::routes(['register' => false]);

-Worked in laravel 7

2
  • 1
    I am using Laravel 9.x version, your solution did not work for me. Thanks.
    – Kamlesh
    Sep 2, 2022 at 11:03
  • This will only work for laravel/ui package and should be mentioned in the answer.
    – Pjotr
    Sep 2, 2022 at 12:46
12

Overwriting the getRegister and postRegister is tricky - if you are using git there is a high possibility that .gitignore is set to ignore framework files which will lead to the outcome that registration will still be possible in your production environment (if laravel is installed via composer for example)

Another possibility is using routes.php and adding this line:

Route::any('/auth/register','HomeController@index');

This way the framework files are left alone and any request will still be redirected away from the Frameworks register module.

1
  • 4
    The classes that override the framework methods are not in the framework (they would be in the app folder) and would be stored by git. Overriding methods does not mean you change them in the framework files.
    – datashaman
    Jan 13, 2016 at 6:42
12

The AuthController.php @limonte has overridden is in App\Http\Controllers\Auth, not in the vendor directory, so Git doesn't ignore this change.

I have added this functions:

public function register() {
    return redirect('/');
}

public function showRegistrationForm() {
    return redirect('/');
}

and it works correctly.

11

LAravel 5.6

Auth::routes([
    'register' => false, // Registration Routes...
    'reset' => false, // Password Reset Routes...
    'verify' => false, // Email Verification Routes...
]);
1
  • This should be merged into the accepted answer, but just a minor correction. This feature was introduced in Laravel 5.7, not Laravel 5.6
    – WebSpanner
    Jul 23, 2019 at 12:00
8

Heres my solution as of 5.4:

//Auth::routes();
// Authentication Routes...
Route::get('login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm')->name('login');
Route::post('login', 'Auth\LoginController@login');
Route::post('logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout')->name('logout');

// Registration Routes...
//Route::get('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@showRegistrationForm')->name('register');
//Route::post('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@register');

// Password Reset Routes...
Route::get('password/reset', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController@showLinkRequestForm')->name('password.request');
Route::post('password/email', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController@sendResetLinkEmail')->name('password.email');
Route::get('password/reset/{token}', 'Auth\ResetPasswordController@showResetForm')->name('password.reset');
Route::post('password/reset', 'Auth\ResetPasswordController@reset');

Notice I've commented out Auth::routes() and the two registration routes.

Important: you must also make sure you remove all instances of route('register') in your app.blade layout, or Laravel will throw an error.

1
  • ^ this. In case these routes ever change, simply copy/paste them from the Auth routes bundle located @ github.com/laravel/framework/blob/… and comment out the registration routes.
    – pbond
    Aug 4, 2017 at 14:15
8

This has been mentioned in earlier comments but I would like to clarify that there are multiple ways to access the auth routes in your web.php file in Laravel ^5.7. depending on your version it might look a little different but they achieve the same result.

First option

Route::auth([
  'register' => false, // Registration Routes...
  'reset' => false, // Password Reset Routes...
  'verify' => false, // Email Verification Routes...
]);

Second option

Auth::routes([
  'register' => false, // Registration Routes...
  'reset' => false, // Password Reset Routes...
  'verify' => false, // Email Verification Routes...
]);
7

The following method works great:

Copy all the routes from /vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Routing/Router.php and paste it into web.php and comment out or delete Auth::routes().

Then setup a conditional to enable and disable registration from .env. Duplicate the 503.blade.php file in views/errors and create a 403 forbidden or whatever you like.

Add ALLOW_USER_REGISTRATION= to .env and control user registration by setting its value to true or false.

Now you have full control of routes and Vendor files remain untouched.

web.php

//Auth::routes();

// Authentication Routes...
Route::get('login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm')->name('login');
Route::post('login', 'Auth\LoginController@login');
Route::post('logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout')->name('logout');

// Registration Routes...
if (env('ALLOW_USER_REGISTRATION', true))
{
    Route::get('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@showRegistrationForm')->name('register');
    Route::post('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@register');
}
else
{
    Route::match(['get','post'], 'register', function () {
        return view('errors.403');
    })->name('register');
}

// Password Reset Routes...
Route::get('password/reset', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController@showLinkRequestForm')->name('password.request');
Route::post('password/email', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController@sendResetLinkEmail')->name('password.email');
Route::get('password/reset/{token}', 'Auth\ResetPasswordController@showResetForm')->name('password.reset');
Route::post('password/reset', 'Auth\ResetPasswordController@reset');

This is a combination of some previous answers notably Rafal G. and Daniel Centore.

6

In routes.php, just add the following:

if (!env('ALLOW_REGISTRATION', false)) {
    Route::any('/register', function() {
        abort(403);
    });
}

Then you can selectively control whether registration is allowed or not in you .env file.

6

On laravel 5.6 and above you can edit in web.php file

Auth::routes(['verify' => true, 'register' => false]);

and you can make it true if you change your mind, i see it easy this way

3

I had to use:

public function getRegister()
{
    return redirect('/');
}

Using Redirect::to() gave me an error:

Class 'App\Http\Controllers\Auth\Redirect' not found
1
  • Thank you, yes this is new version feature, you can use this function or use preceding class, but preceding class needs \ before it, I means \Redirect::to('destination'); Mar 25, 2015 at 18:13
3

In Laravel 5.4

You can find all routes which are registered through Auth::routes() in the class \Illuminate\Routing\Router in the method auth()

it looks like this:

/**
 * Register the typical authentication routes for an application.
 *
 * @return void
 */
public function auth()
{
    // Authentication Routes...
    $this->get('login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm')->name('login');
    $this->post('login', 'Auth\LoginController@login');
    $this->post('logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout')->name('logout');

    // Registration Routes...
    $this->get('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@showRegistrationForm')->name('register');
    $this->post('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@register');

    // Password Reset Routes...
    $this->get('password/reset', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController@showLinkRequestForm')->name('password.request');
    $this->post('password/email', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController@sendResetLinkEmail')->name('password.email');
    $this->get('password/reset/{token}', 'Auth\ResetPasswordController@showResetForm')->name('password.reset');
    $this->post('password/reset', 'Auth\ResetPasswordController@reset');
}

Just copy the routes that you want/need and you are fine!

2

In laravel 5.3, you should override the default showRegistrationForm() by including the code below into the RegisterController.php file in app\Http\Controllers\Auth

    /**
     * Show the application registration form.
     *
     * @return \Illuminate\Http\Response
     */
    public function showRegistrationForm()
    {
        //return view('auth.register');
         abort(404);  //this will throw a page not found exception
    }

since you don't want to allow registration, it's better to just throw 404 error so the intruder knows he is lost. And when you are ready for registraation in your app, uncomment //return view('auth.register'); then comment abort(404);

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\JUST AN FYI///////////////////////////////

If you need to use multiple authentication like create auth for users, members, students, admin, etc. then i advise you checkout this hesto/multi-auth its an awesome package for unlimited auths in L5 apps.

You can read more abouth the Auth methodology and its associated file in this writeup.

1
  • 2
    You also need to patch the post route so to avoid registration of user through post request. Jan 9, 2018 at 19:16
2

In Laravel 5.5

I was trying to accomplish the same problem in Laravel 5.5. Instead of using Auth::routes() in the web.php routes file, I only included the login/logout routes:

Route::get('login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm')->name('login');
Route::post('login', 'Auth\LoginController@login');
Route::post('logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout')->name('logout');
1

If you are using Laravel 8 with Laravel Breeze, these auth routes are all explicitly listed in routes/auth.php. The registration routes are the first two at the top.

Just comment out the ones you don't want and Laravel takes care of the rest, eg. if you comment out the routes for forgot-password then there will be no "Forgot password?" link shown on the login window.

1

For Fortify users, change config/fortify.php

'features' => [
    // Features::registration(), // --------> comment out this
    Features::resetPasswords(),
    // Features::emailVerification(),
    Features::updateProfileInformation(),
    Features::updatePasswords(),
    Features::twoFactorAuthentication(),
],
1

for laravel with fortify like in (Laravel v8.52.0) you can just disable the registration feature in the fortify config file, for example

'features' => [
    //Features::registration(),
    //Features::resetPasswords(),
    // Features::emailVerification(),
    Features::updateProfileInformation(),
    Features::updatePasswords(),
    Features::twoFactorAuthentication([
        'confirmPassword' => true,
    ]),
]
1
  • 2
    This was literally the last answer left on the question, 2 months ago.
    – miken32
    Nov 29, 2021 at 22:15
0

In order not too change the code as it is, just create a middleware to detect if the request url is url('register'), then redirect to 404 or do wherever.

1
  • 1
    Very long run solution. A simple function override with abort can definitely work. Jan 9, 2018 at 19:13
0

In Laravel 5.5

Working on a similar issue and setting the middleware argument from guest to 'auth' seemed like a more elegant solution.

Edit File: app->http->Controllers->Auth->RegisterController.php

public function __construct()
{
     //replace this
     //$this->middleware('guest');

     //with this argument.
       $this->middleware('auth');
}

I could be wrong though...but it seems more slick than editing the routing with more lines and less shity than simply redirecting the page...at least in this instance, wanting to lock down the registration for guests.

1
  • I'd be curious to know whether a user can register multiple times using this method. the guest middleware is responsible redirecting an already logged in user away from a page that only a guest can access (i.e. a /register page)
    – Kingsley
    Jun 15, 2018 at 20:10
0

I guess this would rather be a better solution.

Override the following methods as below mentioned in

App\Http\Controller\Auth\RegisterController.php

use Illuminate\Http\Response;

.
.
.

public function showRegistrationForm()
{
    abort(Response::HTTP_NOT_FOUND);
}

public function register(Request $request)
{
    abort(Response::HTTP_NOT_FOUND);
}
0

In Laravel 5.5 is very simple, if you are using CRUD route system.

Go to app/http/controllers/RegisterController there is namespace: Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\RegistersUser

You need to go to the RegistersUser: Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\RegistersUser

There is the method call showRegistrationForm change this: return view('auth.login'); for this: return redirect()->route('auth.login'); and remove from you blade page route call register. It may look like that:

 <li role="presentation">
     <a class="nav-link" href="{{ route('register') }}">Register</a>
 </li> 
0

I found this to be the easiest solution in laravel 5.6! It redirects anyone who tries to go to yoursite.com/register to yoursite.com

routes/web.php

// redirect from register page to home page
Route::get('/register', function () {
    return redirect('/');
});
0

All I did was replace register blade code with login blade code. That way register still goes to login.

resources/views/auth/register.blade.php is replaced with resources/views/auth/login.blade.php

0
0

For Laravel 5.6+, paste the below methods in app\Http\Controller\Auth\RegisterController

/*
* Disabling registeration.
*
*/
public function register() 
{
    return redirect('/');
}

/*
* Disabling registeration.
*
*/
public function showRegistrationForm() 
{
    return redirect('/');
}

Now you're overriding those methods in RegistersUser trait, whenever you change your mind remove these methods. You may also comment the register links in welcome.blade.php and login.blade.php views.

0

Maybe my answer is too late, but any help will be good for others. if your project goes bigger and you want to handle that dynamically. you can add a field in the settings table as regestration_status: boolean (of course you need to have a settings table if you need to introduce some global variables or global settings).

also, you can add that in the config file with its default status and call it when you need it.

so if registration == false just redirect the user to log in view with some errors message like:

' registration is closed at this moment please go back later '

or add another field to specify from ... to the date of registration when it opens.

and in the registration controller just make your logic (you can add it also in the store function to enforce the user):

public function showRegistrationForm()
{
    $settings= Setting::where('default': true)->first();
    if($settings->registration_status){
      return view('auth.register');
    }
      return redirect()->route('auth.login')->with('errors','registration 
      is closed at this moment please go back later');
}

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