Test Coinbase Commerce Webhooks Locally (Receive Coinbase Commerce Webhooks on localhost)
Test Coinbase Commerce webhooks locally without deploying. Inspect the real payload, forward it to your handler, and verify the X-CC-Webhook-Signature.

You are building a Coinbase Commerce integration and you need to watch your handler react to a real event. The problem hits immediately: Coinbase Commerce will only POST to a public URL, and your handler is running on localhost:8080. Coinbase Commerce has no way to reach it.
The usual workarounds are slow. Deploying to a staging environment for every code change kills your iteration speed. Copying a sample payload out of the docs into curl gives you a guess at the real request, not the exact headers and body Coinbase Commerce actually sends. What you really want is to test Coinbase Commerce webhooks locally — real events, hitting your local handler, on a URL that does not change every time you restart.
This guide shows how to do exactly that.
Why testing Coinbase Commerce webhooks locally is tricky
A webhook is just an HTTP request that Coinbase Commerce sends to a URL when something changes. Coinbase Commerce lives on the public internet; your dev machine usually does not. It sits behind a router, a corporate firewall, or both, with no public IP and no inbound ports open.
So you need something in the middle: a public endpoint Coinbase Commerce can hit that relays each request down to your laptop without you opening a single firewall port. That is what Webhook Relay does — and unlike a random tunnel URL, the endpoint is stable, so you configure Coinbase Commerce once and never touch it again.
Step 1: Inspect the real payload with Webhook Bin
Before you write any handler code, find out what Coinbase Commerce actually sends. Open the free Webhook Bin — no signup — and you get an instant public URL.
- Copy the Webhook Bin URL.
- In Coinbase Commerce, go to Settings → Webhooks, add an endpoint with the URL, and copy the shared secret.
- Trigger a real event and inspect the captured request.
You will see the full body and every header. The body is JSON with an event object (type, data) describing the charge. The signature travels in the X-CC-Webhook-Signature header.
Now you know the exact shape of the data before writing a line of code. For more on this approach, see How to test webhooks and What is a webhook.
Step 2: Forward the events to localhost with the relay agent
Once you know the payload, route those same events into your local handler. Sign up for Webhook Relay, install the relay agent (CLI or Docker), and create a bucket — say coinbase. The bucket gives you a stable public input endpoint.
Start forwarding to your local server:
relay forward --bucket coinbase http://localhost:8080/webhook
The agent opens an outbound connection to Webhook Relay and streams every incoming request down to http://localhost:8080/webhook. Because the connection is outbound, there are no firewall ports to open and no public IP needed — this works from your laptop, behind a corporate proxy, or inside a Kubernetes cluster. Running in Docker? The same command works in the official webhookrelay/webhookrelayd image. Full details are in the localhost forwarding docs.
Now point the Coinbase Commerce webhook at your Webhook Relay endpoint (or create it there from the start), trigger an event, and watch it arrive on localhost.
Coinbase Commerce-specific configuration and quirks
A few Coinbase Commerce details worth knowing:
- Where to add it: Settings → Webhooks — copy the shared secret shown there.
- Events:
charge:created,charge:confirmed,charge:failed,charge:pending,charge:resolved. - Raw body: verify against the unparsed body — re-serialising the JSON changes the bytes and breaks the signature.
Step 3: Verify the Coinbase Commerce webhook signature
Coinbase Commerce signs the raw request body with HMAC-SHA256 using your endpoint's shared secret and sends the hex digest in the X-CC-Webhook-Signature header. Recompute the HMAC over the exact raw body (before any JSON parsing) and compare in constant time.
To sanity-check an HMAC implementation, paste a captured body, your secret, and the received signature into the free HMAC signature verifier. For language-specific code and the common pitfalls (reading the body after a JSON parser has already consumed it, timing-safe comparison), read Verify a webhook signature.
Replay and iterate
This is where local development gets fast:
- Replay from Webhook Relay — past requests are stored on your bucket, so you can resend a captured event against your handler without touching Coinbase Commerce at all.
- Iterate on your handler by editing code and replaying the same delivery until it behaves correctly. No commits, no pushes, no deploys just to test a single code path.
- Keep
relay forwardrunning while you work — events stream straight tolocalhostas you trigger them in Coinbase Commerce.
Because the Webhook Relay endpoint is stable, you can stop and restart the agent, reboot your machine, or come back next week — the Coinbase Commerce configuration never needs to change.
Get started
- Inspect the real payload in the free Webhook Bin — no signup needed.
- Create a Webhook Relay account, install the agent, and run
relay forward --bucket coinbase http://localhost:8080/webhook. - Point your Coinbase Commerce webhook at the stable endpoint, trigger an event, and watch it hit
localhost.
You will be testing real Coinbase Commerce events against your local handler in a few minutes — no deploys, no open firewall ports, and a URL you configure exactly once.
