S
SafeVibe.io
FeaturesHow It WorksPricingDocs
S
SafeVibe.io

The Guardrail for the Vibe Coding Era. Production-grade security for AI-generated code.

Product

  • Features
  • Pricing
  • Security
  • Documentation
  • Learn

Resources

  • Security Guides
  • Next.js Security
  • OWASP Top 10

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Security Docs
  • Terms of Service

© 2026 SafeVibe.io. All rights reserved.

PrivacyTerms
  1. Home
  2. Learn
  3. How to Fix Missing Rate Limiting in Ruby on Rails
Medium SeverityA04:2021 - Insecure DesignCWE-770

How to Fix Missing Rate Limiting in Ruby on Rails

Learn how to prevent and fix Missing Rate Limiting vulnerabilities in Ruby on Rails applications. Step-by-step guide with code examples, security checklists, and best practices.

In This Guide

  • What Is Missing Rate Limiting?
  • Why It Matters
  • How to Fix It in Ruby on Rails
  • Security Checklist
  • Ruby on Rails Security Tips

What Is Missing Rate Limiting?

Missing Rate Limiting is a vulnerability where an application does not restrict the number or frequency of requests a user or client can make to a particular endpoint or resource. Without rate limits, there is no mechanism to prevent abuse of API endpoints, authentication forms, or resource-intensive operations.

This vulnerability is particularly relevant for: login and authentication endpoints (allowing brute force attacks); password reset and OTP verification endpoints (allowing enumeration and bypasses); API endpoints that return sensitive data (allowing mass data harvesting); resource-intensive operations like file processing or report generation (allowing resource exhaustion); and endpoints that send emails or SMS messages (allowing spam or cost amplification).

In serverless and edge environments (Vercel, Cloudflare Workers), traditional rate limiting using in-memory counters does not work because each request may be handled by a different instance. Applications in these environments need distributed rate limiting using external stores like Redis, Upstash, or purpose-built services.

Why It Matters

Without rate limiting, attackers can automate attacks at scale. Credential stuffing attacks can try thousands of username/password combinations per second. API abuse can extract large volumes of data or incur significant compute costs. Brute force attacks on OTP codes or short tokens become feasible. Denial of service attacks can overwhelm backend resources. For SaaS applications, missing rate limits can lead to unexpected infrastructure costs as attackers consume compute, bandwidth, and third-party API quotas. Rate limiting is also a requirement for compliance with many security standards.

How to Fix It in Ruby on Rails

Implement rate limiting on all externally accessible endpoints, with stricter limits on authentication and sensitive operations. Use a distributed rate limiting solution (Upstash, Redis) for serverless deployments. Apply different rate limit tiers based on authentication status and user role. Implement exponential backoff for failed authentication attempts. Use CAPTCHA as a secondary defense for endpoints under heavy abuse. Return appropriate HTTP 429 (Too Many Requests) responses with Retry-After headers. Monitor rate limit hits to detect attack patterns. Consider using an API gateway (Kong, AWS API Gateway) that provides built-in rate limiting. Implement per-user, per-IP, and global rate limits as separate layers.

Ruby on Rails-Specific Advice

  • Rails auto-escapes HTML in ERB templates by default. Never use `raw()` or `html_safe` with unsanitized user content.
  • Use ActiveRecord query interface with parameterized conditions. Never use string interpolation in `where()` clauses.
  • Keep Rails' built-in CSRF protection enabled. Use `protect_from_forgery with: :exception` in ApplicationController.
  • Use Strong Parameters (`params.require(:model).permit(:field)`) to prevent mass assignment vulnerabilities.

Ruby on Rails Security Checklist for Missing Rate Limiting

Add rate limiting to all authentication endpoints in Ruby on Rails
Implement per-user, per-IP, and global rate limit tiers
Use a distributed rate limiting solution (Upstash, Redis) for serverless deployments
Return HTTP 429 responses with Retry-After headers when limits are exceeded
Add CAPTCHA as a secondary defense for heavily abused endpoints
Monitor rate limit hits to detect and respond to attack patterns
Run SafeVibe's rate limiting scan on your Ruby on Rails application

Ruby on Rails Security Best Practices

1

Rails auto-escapes HTML in ERB templates by default. Never use `raw()` or `html_safe` with unsanitized user content.

2

Use ActiveRecord query interface with parameterized conditions. Never use string interpolation in `where()` clauses.

3

Keep Rails' built-in CSRF protection enabled. Use `protect_from_forgery with: :exception` in ApplicationController.

4

Use Strong Parameters (`params.require(:model).permit(:field)`) to prevent mass assignment vulnerabilities.

5

Configure `force_ssl` in production to enforce HTTPS. Set `config.force_ssl = true` in `production.rb`.

6

Use `has_secure_password` with bcrypt for password handling. Never implement custom password hashing.

7

Use `rack-attack` gem for rate limiting and throttling. Block suspicious IPs and limit authentication attempts.

8

Keep `secret_key_base` secret and never commit it to version control. Use Rails credentials or environment variables.

Scan Your Ruby on Rails App with SafeVibe

Stop guessing if your Ruby on Rails app is vulnerable to Missing Rate Limiting. Run an automated penetration test in minutes and get actionable results.

Start Free Scan

Related Guides

Missing Rate Limiting in Other Frameworks

Next.jsNuxtSvelteKitRemix
View all Missing Rate Limiting guides

More Ruby on Rails Security Guides

Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)SQL InjectionCross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF)Insecure Direct Object References (IDOR)
View all Ruby on Rails guides