On most operating systems, permissions aren't just granted to apps at install time. Rather, developers have to ask the user for permissions while the app is running.

This plugin provides a cross-platform (iOS, Android) API to request permissions and check their status. You can also open the device's app settings so users can grant a permission.

On Android, you can show a rationale for requesting a permission.

While the permissions are being requested during runtime, you'll still need to tell the OS which permissions your app might potentially use. That requires adding permission configuration to Android- and iOS-specific files.

Android Upgrade pre 1.12 Android projects Since version 4.4.0 this plugin is implemented using the Flutter 1.12 Android plugin APIs. Unfortunately this means App developers also need to migrate their Apps to support the new Android infrastructure. You can do so by following the Upgrading pre 1.12 Android projects migration guide. Failing to do so might result in unexpected behaviour. Most common known error is the permission_handler not returning after calling the .request() method on a permission. AndroidX As of version 3.1.0 the permission_handler plugin switched to the AndroidX version of the Android Support Libraries. This means you need to make sure your Android project is also upgraded to support AndroidX. Detailed instructions can be found here. The TL;DR version is: Add the following to your "gradle.properties" file: android.useAndroidX=true android.enableJetifier=true Make sure you set the compileSdkVersion in your "android/app/build.gradle" file to 28: android { compileSdkVersion 28 ... } Make sure you replace all the android. dependencies to their AndroidX counterparts (a full list can be found here: https://developer.android.com/jetpack/androidx/migrate). Add permissions to your AndroidManifest.xml file. There's a debug , main and profile version which are chosen depending on how you start your app. In general, it's sufficient to add permission only to the main version. Here's an example AndroidManifest.xml with a complete list of all possible permissions.

iOS Add permission to your Info.plist file. Here's an example Info.plist with a complete list of all possible permissions. IMPORTANT: You will have to include all permission options when you want to submit your App. This is because the permission_handler plugin touches all different SDKs and because the static code analyser (run by Apple upon App submission) detects this and will assert if it cannot find a matching permission option in the Info.plist . More information about this can be found here. The permission_handler plugin use macros to control whether a permission is supported. You can remove permissions you don't use: Add the following to your Podfile file: post_install do |installer| installer.pods_project.targets.each do |target| target.build_configurations.each do |config| ... # Here are some configurations automatically generated by flutter # You can remove unused permissions here # for more infomation: https://github.com/BaseflowIT/flutter-permission-handler/blob/develop/permission_handler/ios/Classes/PermissionHandlerEnums.h # e.g. when you don't need camera permission, just add 'PERMISSION_CAMERA=0' config.build_settings['GCC_PREPROCESSOR_DEFINITIONS'] ||= [ '$(inherited)', ## dart: PermissionGroup.calendar # 'PERMISSION_EVENTS=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.reminders # 'PERMISSION_REMINDERS=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.contacts # 'PERMISSION_CONTACTS=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.camera # 'PERMISSION_CAMERA=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.microphone # 'PERMISSION_MICROPHONE=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.speech # 'PERMISSION_SPEECH_RECOGNIZER=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.photos # 'PERMISSION_PHOTOS=0', ## dart: [PermissionGroup.location, PermissionGroup.locationAlways, PermissionGroup.locationWhenInUse] # 'PERMISSION_LOCATION=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.notification # 'PERMISSION_NOTIFICATIONS=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.mediaLibrary # 'PERMISSION_MEDIA_LIBRARY=0', ## dart: PermissionGroup.sensors # 'PERMISSION_SENSORS=0' ] end end end Remove the # character in front of the permission you do not want to use. For example if you don't need access to the calendar make sure the code looks like this: ## dart: PermissionGroup.calendar 'PERMISSION_EVENTS=0', Delete the corresponding permission description in Info.plist e.g. when you don't need camera permission, just delete 'NSCameraUsageDescription' The following lists the relationship between Permission and The key of Info.plist : | Permission | Info.plist | Macro | | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------- | | PermissionGroup.calendar | NSCalendarsUsageDescription | PERMISSION_EVENTS | | PermissionGroup.reminders | NSRemindersUsageDescription | PERMISSION_REMINDERS | | PermissionGroup.contacts | NSContactsUsageDescription | PERMISSION_CONTACTS | | PermissionGroup.camera | NSCameraUsageDescription | PERMISSION_CAMERA | | PermissionGroup.microphone | NSMicrophoneUsageDescription | PERMISSION_MICROPHONE | | PermissionGroup.speech | NSSpeechRecognitionUsageDescription | PERMISSION_SPEECH_RECOGNIZER | | PermissionGroup.photos | NSPhotoLibraryUsageDescription | PERMISSION_PHOTOS | | PermissionGroup.location, PermissionGroup.locationAlways, PermissionGroup.locationWhenInUse | NSLocationUsageDescription, NSLocationAlwaysAndWhenInUseUsageDescription, NSLocationWhenInUseUsageDescription | PERMISSION_LOCATION | | PermissionGroup.notification | PermissionGroupNotification | PERMISSION_NOTIFICATIONS | | PermissionGroup.mediaLibrary | NSAppleMusicUsageDescription, kTCCServiceMediaLibrary | PERMISSION_MEDIA_LIBRARY | | PermissionGroup.sensors | NSMotionUsageDescription | PERMISSION_SENSORS | Clean & Rebuild

How to use #

There are a number of Permission s. You can get a Permission 's status , which is either undetermined , granted , denied , restricted or permanentlyDenied .

var status = await Permission.camera.status; if (status.isUndetermined) { // We didn't ask for permission yet. } // You can can also directly ask the permission about its status. if (await Permission.location.isRestricted) { // The OS restricts access, for example because of parental controls. }

Call request() on a Permission to request it. If it has already been granted before, nothing happens.

request() returns the new status of the Permission .

if (await Permission.contacts.request().isGranted) { // Either the permission was already granted before or the user just granted it. } // You can request multiple permissions at once. Map<Permission, PermissionStatus> statuses = await [ Permission.location, Permission.storage, ].request(); print(statuses[Permission.location]);

Some permissions, for example location or acceleration sensor permissions, have an associated service, which can be enabled or disabled .

if (await Permission.locationWhenInUse.serviceStatus.isEnabled) { // Use location. }

You can also open the app settings:

if (await Permission.speech.isPermanentlyDenied) { // The user opted to never again see the permission request dialog for this // app. The only way to change the permission's status now is to let the // user manually enable it in the system settings. openAppSettings(); }

On Android, you can show a rationale for using a permission:

bool isShown = await Permission.contacts.shouldShowRequestRationale;

Please file any issues, bugs or feature request as an issue on our GitHub page.

Want to contribute #

If you would like to contribute to the plugin (e.g. by improving the documentation, solving a bug or adding a cool new feature), please carefully review our contribution guide and send us your pull request.

This Permission handler plugin for Flutter is developed by Baseflow. You can contact us at hello@baseflow.com