Based on the publish/subscribe model, FCM topic messaging allows you to send a message to multiple devices that have opted in to a particular topic. You compose topic messages as needed, and FCM handles routing and delivering the message reliably to the right devices.
For example, users of a local tide forecasting app could opt in to a "tidal currents alerts" topic and receive notifications of optimal saltwater fishing conditions in specified areas. Users of a sports app could subscribe to automatic updates in live game scores for their favorite teams.
Some things to keep in mind about topics:
Topic messaging is best suited for content such as weather, or other publicly available information.
Topic messages are optimized for throughput rather than latency. For fast, secure delivery to single devices or small groups of devices, target messages to registration tokens, not topics.
If you need to send messages to multiple devices per user, consider device group messaging for those use cases.
Topic messaging supports unlimited subscriptions for each topic. However, FCM enforces limits in these areas:
- One app instance can be subscribed to no more than 2000 topics.
- If you are using batch import to subscribe app instances, each request is limited to 1000 app instances.
- The frequency of new subscriptions is rate-limited per project. If you send
too many subscription requests in a short period of time, FCM servers will
respond with a
429 RESOURCE_EXHAUSTED
("quota exceeded") response. Retry with exponential backoff.
Subscribe the client app to a topic
Client apps can subscribe to any existing topic, or they can create a new topic. When a client app subscribes to a new topic name (one that does not already exist for your Firebase project), a new topic of that name is created in FCM and any client can subsequently subscribe to it.
To subscribe to a topic, call subscribeToTopic()
with the topic name. This method
returns a Future
, which resolves when the subscription succeeded:
await FirebaseMessaging.instance.subscribeToTopic("topic");
To unsubscribe, call unsubscribeFromTopic()
with the topic name.
subscribeToTopic()
and unsubscribeFromTopic()
are not supported for web
clients. To learn how to manage subscriptions for web users, see
Send messages to topics on Web/JavaScript.
Next steps
- Learn how to send topic messages.
- Learn how to Manage topic subscriptions on the server.