TanStack Start React

Learn how to set up and configure Sentry in your TanStack Start React application, capturing your first errors, and viewing them in Sentry.

This guide walks you through setting up Sentry in a TanStack Start (React) app. For TanStack Router (React), see our React TanStack Router guide.

You need:

Choose the features you want to configure, and this guide will show you how:

Want to learn more about these features?
  • Issues (always enabled): Sentry's core error monitoring product that automatically reports errors, uncaught exceptions, and unhandled rejections. If you have something that looks like an exception, Sentry can capture it.
  • Tracing: Track software performance while seeing the impact of errors across multiple systems. For example, distributed tracing allows you to follow a request from the frontend to the backend and back.
  • Session Replay: Get to the root cause of an issue faster by viewing a video-like reproduction of what was happening in the user's browser before, during, and after the problem.
  • Logs: Centralize and analyze your application logs to correlate them with errors and performance issues. Search, filter, and visualize log data to understand what's happening in your applications.

Run the command for your preferred package manager to add the SDK package to your application:

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npm install @sentry/tanstackstart-react --save

Create a src/client.tsx file (if you don't already have one) and initialize Sentry:

src/client.tsx
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import { hydrateRoot } from "react-dom/client";
import { StartClient } from "@tanstack/react-start";
import { createRouter } from "./router";

import * as Sentry from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";

const router = createRouter();

Sentry.init({
  dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0
example-org / example-project
"
,
// Adds request headers and IP for users, for more info visit: // https://docs.sentry.io/platforms/javascript/guides/tanstackstart-react/configuration/options/#sendDefaultPii sendDefaultPii: true, integrations: [ // performance Sentry.tanstackRouterBrowserTracingIntegration(router), // performance // session-replay Sentry.replayIntegration(), // session-replay // user-feedback Sentry.feedbackIntegration({ // Additional SDK configuration goes in here, for example: colorScheme: "system", }), // user-feedback ], // logs // Enable logs to be sent to Sentry enableLogs: true, // logs // performance // Set tracesSampleRate to 1.0 to capture 100% // of transactions for tracing. // We recommend adjusting this value in production. // Learn more at https://docs.sentry.io/platforms/javascript/configuration/options/#traces-sample-rate tracesSampleRate: 1.0, // performance // session-replay // Capture Replay for 10% of all sessions, // plus for 100% of sessions with an error. // Learn more at https://docs.sentry.io/platforms/javascript/session-replay/configuration/#general-integration-configuration replaysSessionSampleRate: 0.1, replaysOnErrorSampleRate: 1.0, // session-replay }); hydrateRoot(document, <StartClient router={router} />);

Next, import and initialize Sentry in src/server.tsx:

src/server.tsx
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import * as Sentry from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";

Sentry.init({
  dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0
example-org / example-project
"
,
// Adds request headers and IP for users, for more info visit: // https://docs.sentry.io/platforms/javascript/guides/tanstackstart-react/configuration/options/#sendDefaultPii sendDefaultPii: true, // logs // Enable logs to be sent to Sentry enableLogs: true, // logs // performance // Set tracesSampleRate to 1.0 to capture 100% // of transactions for tracing. // We recommend adjusting this value in production // Learn more at // https://docs.sentry.io/platforms/javascript/configuration/options/#traces-sample-rate tracesSampleRate: 1.0, // performance });

Wrap createRootRoute with wrapCreateRootRouteWithSentry in src/routes/__root.tsx to apply tracing to Server-Side Rendering (SSR):

src/routes/__root.tsx
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import type { ReactNode } from "react";
import { createRootRoute } from "@tanstack/react-router";
import { wrapCreateRootRouteWithSentry } from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";
// (Wrap `createRootRoute`, not its return value!)
export const Route = wrapCreateRootRouteWithSentry(createRootRoute)({
// ... });

Wrap the default stream handler with wrapStreamHandlerWithSentry in src/server.tsx to instrument requests to your server:

src/server.tsx
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import {
  createStartHandler,
  defaultStreamHandler,
} from "@tanstack/react-start/server";
import { getRouterManifest } from "@tanstack/react-start/router-manifest";
import { createRouter } from "./router";
import * as Sentry from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";

export default createStartHandler({
  createRouter,
  getRouterManifest,
})(Sentry.wrapStreamHandlerWithSentry(defaultStreamHandler));

Add the Sentry middleware handler to your global middlewares in src/global-middleware.ts to instrument your server function invocations:

src/global-middleware.ts
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import {
  createMiddleware,
  registerGlobalMiddleware,
} from "@tanstack/react-start";
import * as Sentry from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";

registerGlobalMiddleware({
  middleware: [
    createMiddleware({ type: "function" }).server(
      Sentry.sentryGlobalServerMiddlewareHandler()
    ),
  ],
});

Sentry automatically captures unhandled client-side errors. Errors caught by your own error boundaries aren't captured unless you report them manually:

Wrap your custom ErrorBoundary component with withErrorBoundary:

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import React from "react";
import * as Sentry from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";

class MyErrorBoundary extends React.Component {
  // ...
}

export const MySentryWrappedErrorBoundary = Sentry.withErrorBoundary(
  MyErrorBoundary,
  {
    // ... sentry error wrapper options
  },
);

Use Sentry's captureException function inside a useEffect hook within your errorComponent:

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import { createRoute } from "@tanstack/react-router";
import * as Sentry from "@sentry/tanstackstart-react";
const route = createRoute({ errorComponent: ({ error }) => {
useEffect(() => { Sentry.captureException(error) }, [error])
return ( // ... ) } })

You can prevent ad blockers from blocking Sentry events using tunneling. Use the tunnel option to add an API endpoint in your application that forwards Sentry events to Sentry servers.

To enable tunneling, update Sentry.init with the following option:

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Sentry.init({
  dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0
example-org / example-project
"
,,
tunnel: "/tunnel",
});

This will send all events to the tunnel endpoint. However, the events need to be parsed and redirected to Sentry, so you'll need to do additional configuration on the server. You can find a detailed explanation on how to do this on our Troubleshooting page.

Let's test your setup and confirm that Sentry is working correctly and sending data to your Sentry project.

To verify that Sentry captures errors and creates issues in your Sentry project, add a test button to one of your pages, which will trigger an error that Sentry will capture when you click it:

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<button
  type="button"
  onClick={() => {
    throw new Error("Sentry Test Error");
  }}
>
  Break the world
</button>;

To test tracing, create a new file like src/routes/sentry-example.ts to create a test route /sentry-example:

src/routes/sentry-example.ts
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import { createServerFileRoute } from "@tanstack/react-start/server";
import { json } from "@tanstack/react-start";

export const ServerRoute = createServerFileRoute(
  "/sentry-example",
).methods({
  GET: async ({ request }) => {
    throw new Error("Sentry Example Route Error");
    return json({ message: "Testing Sentry Error..." });
  },
});

Next, update your test button to call this route and throw an error if the response isn't ok:

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<button
  type="button"
  onClick={async () => {
    await Sentry.startSpan(
      {
        name: "Example Frontend Span",
        op: "test",
      },
      async () => {
        const res = await fetch("/sentry-example");
        if (!res.ok) {
          throw new Error("Sentry Example Frontend Error");
        }
      },
    );
  }}
>
  Break the world
</button>;

Open the page in a browser and click the button to trigger two errors:

  • a frontend error
  • an error within the API route

Additionally, this starts a performance trace to measure the time it takes for the API request to complete.

Now, head over to your project on Sentry.io to view the collected data (it takes a couple of moments for the data to appear).

Need help locating the captured errors in your Sentry project?
  1. Open the Issues page and select an error from the issues list to view the full details and context of this error. For more details, see this interactive walkthrough.
  2. Open the Traces page and select a trace to reveal more information about each span, its duration, and any errors. For an interactive UI walkthrough, click here.
  3. Open the Replays page and select an entry from the list to get a detailed view where you can replay the interaction and get more information to help you troubleshoot.
  4. Open the Logs page and filter by service, environment, or search keywords to view log entries from your application. For an interactive UI walkthrough, click here.

At this point, you should have integrated Sentry into your TanStack Start React application and should already be sending data to your Sentry project.

Now's a good time to customize your setup and look into more advanced topics. Our next recommended steps for you are:

Are you having problems setting up the SDK?
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