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Connect Stripe to WordPress in two minutes.

Real-time triggers from Stripe, ready-made actions in WordPress. Filter, transform, and route without writing a line of code.

Trigger app
Stripe as the trigger

Workflows fire when something happens in Stripe.

See all 10 triggers →
Action app
WordPress as the action

Workflows do something in WordPress, instantly.

Both directions

Pick the way that fits your stack.

Pair pages are mirrored. Each direction gets its own dedicated page.

StripeWordPress

When something happens in Stripe, do it in WordPress.

10 Stripe triggers wired to 5 WordPress actions. Most-used pairing: Charge FailedCreate Post.

WordPressStripe

Or fire it the other way around.

0 WordPress triggers wired to 31 Stripe actions downstream.

  • Use any trigger in the catalog as the upstream.
See WordPressStripe
Popular pairings

Common Stripe → WordPress workflows.

Pick a pairing to set it up in two minutes. Each one is a fully editable recipe.

Showing 9 of 50 combinations
When charge failed in Stripe, create post in WordPress.

Fires when a charge attempt fails in Stripe (decline, fraud, insufficient funds). Use to alert the customer, retry, or kick off dunning.

When charge failed in Stripe, delete post in WordPress.

Fires when a charge attempt fails in Stripe (decline, fraud, insufficient funds). Use to alert the customer, retry, or kick off dunning.

When charge failed in Stripe, list categories in WordPress.

Fires when a charge attempt fails in Stripe (decline, fraud, insufficient funds). Use to alert the customer, retry, or kick off dunning.

When charge failed in Stripe, list posts in WordPress.

Fires when a charge attempt fails in Stripe (decline, fraud, insufficient funds). Use to alert the customer, retry, or kick off dunning.

When checkout completed in Stripe, create post in WordPress.

Fires when a Stripe Checkout session is completed (regardless of payment async status). Common use: provision the customer, send a receipt, or grant entitlements.

When checkout completed in Stripe, delete post in WordPress.

Fires when a Stripe Checkout session is completed (regardless of payment async status). Common use: provision the customer, send a receipt, or grant entitlements.

When checkout completed in Stripe, list categories in WordPress.

Fires when a Stripe Checkout session is completed (regardless of payment async status). Common use: provision the customer, send a receipt, or grant entitlements.

When checkout completed in Stripe, list posts in WordPress.

Fires when a Stripe Checkout session is completed (regardless of payment async status). Common use: provision the customer, send a receipt, or grant entitlements.

When new customer in Stripe, create post in WordPress.

Fires when a new customer is created in Stripe. Use to mirror to your CRM, send a welcome email, or enrich the customer record before first charge.

How it works

Connect Stripe and WordPress in five steps.

No code, no glue, no half-day setup. Each step is one click.

  1. 1
    Connect
    Authorize Stripe and WordPress

    Open Tiny Command, authorize Stripe and WordPress once each. Both connections are available to every workflow on your account.

  2. 2
    Trigger
    Pick a Stripe trigger

    Drop the Stripe → Charge Failed trigger onto the canvas. Tiny Command auto-registers the webhook.

    POST /v1/webhooks/stripe.trigger-charge-failed
  3. 3
    Transform
    Add a filter or AI step

    Optionally add a Filter node ("subject contains URGENT") or an AI step ("classify intent") between trigger and action.

  4. 4
    Action
    Add the WordPress action

    Drop the WordPress → Create Post action below it. Map fields from the Stripe payload into the WordPress inputs.

    wordpress.create-post
  5. 5
    Publish
    Publish and forget

    Hit Publish. Tiny Command runs it in production from second one. Watch the run-log fill up.

FAQ

Questions about Stripe + WordPress.

How long does it take to connect Stripe and WordPress on Tiny Command?
Under two minutes. Authorize Stripe and WordPress once each, drop the Stripe trigger and WordPress action onto a workflow canvas, map a couple of fields, and publish. No code, no glue.
Is the Stripe ↔ WordPress integration real-time?
Yes. Both Stripe and WordPress expose webhooks, so events from one fire workflows in the other within seconds rather than on a polling interval.
Can I filter or transform data between Stripe and WordPress?
Yes. Add a Filter node to only pass through matching events, a Switch node to branch by value, or an AI / Code node to transform payloads before they hit WordPress.
What Stripe events can trigger a WordPress workflow?
Any of the 10 Stripe triggers, including "Charge Failed". Each fires in real time when the matching event happens in Stripe.
Do I need a paid plan to use Stripe with WordPress?
No. There's a free tier that covers most Stripe+WordPress use cases without a credit card. Paid plans unlock higher run volumes and team features when you outgrow it.
What if I want WordPress → Stripe instead?
Build it the same way, in reverse. There's a dedicated /integrations/wordpress/with/stripe page with the reverse-direction triggers and actions.
Related

Other apps that pair well with Stripe.


Wire Stripe to WordPress in 2 minutes.

Free tier available. No credit card. No onboarding call.