Why Wagmi
The Problems
Building Ethereum applications is hard. Apps need to support connecting wallets, multiple chains, signing messages and data, sending transactions, listening for events and state changes, refreshing stale blockchain data, and much more. This is all on top of solving for app-specific use-cases and providing polished user experiences.
The ecosystem is also continuously evolving, meaning you need to adapt to new improvements or get left behind. App developers should not need to worry about connecting tens of different wallets, the intricacies of multi-chain support, typos accidentally sending an order of magnitude more ETH or calling a misspelled contract function, or accidentally spamming their RPC provider, costing thousands in compute units.
Wagmi solves all these problems and more — allowing app developers to focus on building high-quality and performant experiences for Ethereum — by focusing on developer experience, performance, feature coverage, and stability.
Developer Experience
Wagmi delivers a great developer experience through modular and composable APIs, automatic type safety and inference, and comprehensive documentation.
It provides developers with intuitive building blocks to build their Ethereum apps. While Wagmi's APIs might seem more verbose at first, it makes Wagmi's modular building blocks extremely flexible. Easy to move around, change, and remove. It also allows developers to better understand Ethereum concepts as well as understand what and why certain properties are being passed through. Learning how to use Wagmi is a great way to learn how to interact with Ethereum in general.
Wagmi also provides strongly typed APIs, allowing consumers to get the best possible experience through autocomplete, type inference, as well as static validation. You often just need to provide an ABI and Wagmi can help you autocomplete your way to success, identify type errors before your users do, drill into blockchain errors at compile and runtimes with surgical precision, and much more.
The API documentation is comprehensive and contains usage info for every module in Wagmi. The core team uses a documentation and test driven development approach to building modules, which leads to predictable and stable APIs.
Performance
Performance is critical for applications on all sizes. Slow page load and interactions can cause users to stop using applications. Wagmi uses and is built by the same team behind Viem, the most performant production-ready Ethereum library.
End users should not be required to download a module of over 100kB in order to interact with Ethereum. Wagmi is optimized for tree-shaking and dead-code elimination, allowing apps to minimize bundle size for fast page load times.
Data layer performance is also critical. Slow, unnecessary, and manual data fetching can make apps unusable and cost thousands in RPC compute units. Wagmi supports caching, deduplication, persistence, and much more through TanStack Query.
Feature Coverage
Wagmi supports the most popular and commonly-used Ethereum features out of the box with 40+ React Hooks for accounts, wallets, contracts, transactions, signing, ENS, and more. Wagmi also supports just about any wallet out there through it's official connectors, EIP-6963 support, and extensible API.
If you need lower-level control, you can always drop down to Wagmi Core or Viem, which Wagmi uses internally to perform blockchain operations. Wagmi also manages multi-chain support automatically so developers can focus on their applications instead of adding custom code.
Finally, Wagmi has a CLI to manage ABIs as well as a robust ecosystem of third-party libraries, like ConnectKit, RainbowKit, AppKit, Dynamic, Privy, and many more, so you can get started quickly without needing to build everything from scratch.
Stability
Stability is a fundamental principle for Wagmi. Many organizations, large and small, rely heavily on Wagmi and expect it to be entirely stable for their users and applications.
Wagmi's test suite runs against forked Ethereum nodes to make sure functions work across chains. The test suite also runs type tests against many different versions of peer dependencies, like TypeScript, to ensure compatibility with the latest releases of other popular software.
Wagmi follows semver so developers can upgrade between versions with confidence. Starting with Wagmi v2, new functionality will be opt-in with old functionality being deprecated alongside the new features. This means upgrading to the latest major versions will not require immediate changes.
Lastly, the core team works full-time on Wagmi and related projects, and is constantly improving Wagmi and keeping it up-to-date with industry trends and changes.