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 Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) in Vue
High SeverityA01:2021 - Broken Access ControlCWE-352

How to Fix Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) in Vue

Learn how to prevent and fix Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) vulnerabilities in Vue applications. Step-by-step guide with code examples, security checklists, and best practices.

In This Guide

  • What Is Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF)?
  • Why It Matters
  • How to Fix It in Vue
  • Security Checklist
  • Vue Security Tips

What Is Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF)?

Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) is an attack that tricks an authenticated user into submitting a request they did not intend to make. The attack exploits the fact that browsers automatically include cookies (including session cookies) with every request to a domain, regardless of the request's origin.

An attacker crafts a malicious page or email containing a request to the target application. When an authenticated user visits the attacker's page, their browser automatically sends the request along with valid session cookies. The target application cannot distinguish this forged request from a legitimate one. CSRF attacks can change email addresses, transfer funds, modify account settings, or perform any action the authenticated user is authorized to do.

The attack is particularly effective because it does not require the attacker to steal the user's credentials -- it simply leverages the existing authenticated session. Modern single-page applications using token-based authentication (like JWT in headers) are naturally resistant to CSRF since custom headers are not automatically attached to cross-origin requests, but cookie-based authentication remains vulnerable without explicit protections.

Why It Matters

CSRF attacks can have serious consequences because they execute actions with the full authority of the victim user. In financial applications, CSRF can initiate unauthorized transfers. In administrative panels, it can create new admin accounts or change security settings. Because the requests come from the legitimate user's browser with valid authentication, they are difficult to detect and trace. CSRF attacks are also easy to execute at scale -- an attacker can embed the malicious request in a popular website, forum post, or advertising network, potentially affecting thousands of users simultaneously.

How to Fix It in Vue

Implement anti-CSRF tokens: generate a unique, unpredictable token for each user session and include it in every state-changing request. The server validates this token before processing the request. Use the SameSite cookie attribute (set to "Lax" or "Strict") to prevent cookies from being sent with cross-origin requests. Verify the Origin and Referer headers on the server side. Require re-authentication for sensitive operations like changing passwords or email addresses. Use framework-provided CSRF protection (Next.js Server Actions have built-in CSRF protection, Django includes CSRF middleware, Express has csurf). For APIs, prefer token-based authentication sent via custom headers rather than cookies.

Vue-Specific Advice

  • Never use `v-html` with unsanitized user input. Vue's template interpolation `{{ }}` auto-escapes HTML, but `v-html` does not.
  • Avoid using `eval()` or `new Function()` in Vue components. Use computed properties and watchers for dynamic behavior instead.
  • Validate all props passed to components that render user-controlled content, especially in server-rendered (SSR) contexts.
  • Use Vue Router's navigation guards to implement client-side route protection, but always enforce authorization on the server as well.

Vue Security Checklist for Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF)

Verify CSRF protection is enabled for all state-changing endpoints in Vue
Set SameSite attribute to 'Lax' or 'Strict' on all session cookies
Validate Origin and Referer headers on the server side
Require re-authentication for sensitive operations (password change, email change, fund transfers)
Use framework-provided CSRF protection rather than implementing custom solutions
Test CSRF protection by attempting cross-origin form submissions
Run SafeVibe's CSRF scan on your Vue application

Vue Security Best Practices

1

Never use `v-html` with unsanitized user input. Vue's template interpolation `{{ }}` auto-escapes HTML, but `v-html` does not.

2

Avoid using `eval()` or `new Function()` in Vue components. Use computed properties and watchers for dynamic behavior instead.

3

Validate all props passed to components that render user-controlled content, especially in server-rendered (SSR) contexts.

4

Use Vue Router's navigation guards to implement client-side route protection, but always enforce authorization on the server as well.

5

Be cautious with Vue's `compile()` function, which can execute arbitrary code. Never pass user input to the template compiler.

6

Store sensitive configuration in environment variables prefixed per your build tool's convention (VITE_ for Vite) and never include secrets in client-side code.

7

Implement Content Security Policy headers to prevent inline script injection even if an XSS vulnerability exists.

8

Use Pinia stores carefully -- avoid storing sensitive data in state that persists across page navigations in SSR contexts.

Scan Your Vue App with SafeVibe

Stop guessing if your Vue app is vulnerable to Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF). Run an automated penetration test in minutes and get actionable results.

Start Free Scan

Related Guides

Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) in Other Frameworks

Next.jsReactNuxtSvelte
View all Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) guides

More Vue Security Guides

Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)Security MisconfigurationSensitive Data ExposureInsecure Deserialization
View all Vue guides