Test Shopify Webhooks with HookTest
Test Shopify webhooks for orders, products, and customer events. Use HookTest to create a free webhook URL, point Shopify at it, and inspect every request in real time — headers, body, and signature included.
Quick Start
Get Shopify webhooks flowing to HookTest in under a minute:
- Create a HookTest URL. Go to hooktest.dev and click Create Bin. Copy the webhook URL.
- Add it to Shopify webhook settings. Paste the HookTest URL as your webhook endpoint in the Shopify developer dashboard. Select the events you want to receive.
- Trigger an event and inspect. Perform an action in Shopify (or use their test/sandbox mode) and watch the request appear in HookTest in real time. Check headers, body, and query parameters.
Common Shopify Webhook Events
These are the most commonly tested Shopify webhook events. Each one triggers an HTTP POST to your webhook URL with a JSON payload.
| Event | Description |
|---|---|
orders/create | A new order is placed |
orders/paid | An order payment is captured |
products/update | A product is modified |
customers/create | A new customer account is created |
Verifying Shopify Signatures
Shopify signs every webhook request using the X-Shopify-Hmac-SHA256 header. You should always verify this signature in production to confirm the request actually came from Shopify and was not tampered with in transit.
When testing with HookTest, you can inspect the raw signature header value in the request details. This is useful for verifying that your signature verification code handles the header format correctly before deploying to production.
See the official Shopify webhook docs for the full signature verification algorithm and code samples.
Why Test Shopify Webhooks?
Webhook handlers are notoriously hard to debug. You cannot see what Shopify is sending until your endpoint receives it, and errors in your handler can cause silent failures — missed payments, lost data, or broken integrations.
HookTest gives you full visibility into every request before you write a line of handler code. Create a bin, point Shopify at it, and see exactly what arrives: HTTP method, headers (including signatures), body, and query parameters. Once your handler is ready, use webhook forwarding to send requests to your local server in real time.
Start testing Shopify webhooks
Create a free webhook URL in one click. No signup required.
Create Free Webhook URL