Sign In With Telegram Wordpress Plugin - Rating, Reviews, Demo & Download
Plugin Description
Sign in with Telegram lets your visitors log in with their Telegram account — no extra password to remember, no new account to create. Unlike older Telegram-login plugins that rely on a script embedded from Telegram (which modern privacy-focused browsers often block), this plugin uses Telegram’s standard OpenID Connect login: a secure redirect to Telegram and back. It works reliably in every browser, including ones with strict tracker blocking turned on.
Features
- “Sign in with Telegram” button on the standard
wp-login.phpscreen, as a[telegram_signin_button]shortcode anywhere on your site, or as a Block Editor block. - Account linking from the user profile screen — existing WordPress users can connect or disconnect their Telegram account.
- Profile sync — display name and avatar from the user’s Telegram profile flow through to the WordPress profile automatically.
- No automatic account merging — a Telegram identity can only attach to an existing WordPress user through an explicit click-to-link action from a logged-in session, so a stranger who happens to share an email address can never take over an account.
- Secure by default — uses the same kind of modern, signed redirect flow that “Sign in with Google” and “Sign in with Apple” use. No shared bot-token secret on your server, no manual key rotation.
- Settings page in wp-admin where you paste the bot’s Client ID + Client Secret, pick the default role for new users, and optionally collect the visitor’s verified phone number or request permission for your bot to message them directly.
How it compares to the legacy Login Widget
Telegram’s older Login Widget (used by most existing Telegram-login plugins on the directory) is not OAuth or OpenID Connect. It loads a JavaScript file from telegram.org that renders Telegram’s button on your page and then hands the auth result either to a JavaScript callback or to a server URL. Either mode still needs the embedded script to render the button in the first place. That setup is increasingly fragile:
- Browsers with strict third-party-script blocking — Brave with default shields, Firefox Enhanced Tracking Protection on Strict, Safari Lockdown Mode, uBlock Origin filter lists — frequently block the embedded script outright, so the button never renders and visitors have no way to start the flow.
- The widget’s authentication hash is an HMAC-SHA256 over your bot token, so anyone who wants to verify a login has to hold a copy of that secret. There’s no standard JWT / JWKS story to lean on.
- Key rotation is manual — changing the HMAC key means rotating the bot token in BotFather and updating it on every server that verifies logins.
Sign in with Telegram uses Telegram’s newer OpenID Connect provider instead — a standard server-side redirect flow with a properly signed RS256 id_token. No third-party scripts on your pages, no shared bot-token secret with verifiers, automatic key rotation via JWKS. It behaves the same regardless of how privacy-locked-down the visitor’s browser is.
External services
This plugin connects to Telegram’s OpenID Connect provider at oauth.telegram.org so visitors can sign in with their Telegram account. No data is sent to Telegram unless a visitor actively starts a sign-in.
What is sent, and when:
- Sign-in start. When a visitor clicks the “Sign in with Telegram” button, their browser is redirected to
oauth.telegram.orgwith the bot’s Client ID, the requested scopes (alwaysopenidandprofile; additionallyphoneand / ortelegram:bot_accessif you enabled those in Settings Sign in with Telegram), a randomstate, a randomnonce, and a PKCEcode_challenge(SHA-256). The only user-specific traffic at this step is the browser redirect itself. If the discovery cache is cold (see below), building the redirect URL also triggers an anonymous server-side GET of the discovery document — no user data in that request. - Sign-in callback. After the visitor approves the sign-in on Telegram’s side, Telegram redirects them back to your site with an authorization
code. The plugin then makes a single server-to-server POST to Telegram’s token endpoint, sending the Client ID + Client Secret (as HTTP Basic auth), thecode, the matching PKCEcode_verifier, and the redirect URI. Telegram responds with a signedid_tokencontaining the visitor’s Telegram identifier, name, profile picture URL, and (if thephonescope was granted) phone number. - Discovery + JWKS lookup. The first sign-in after activation (and again after the local cache expires, 12 hours) triggers a one-off, anonymous GET to Telegram’s OpenID Connect discovery document and JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) at
oauth.telegram.org. Both responses are cached in WordPress transients. If a laterid_tokenreferences a signing key that isn’t in the cache (Telegram rotated keys), the JWKS is re-fetched once; a short cooldown prevents repeated refresh attempts. No user data is sent in any of these requests.
This service is provided by Telegram. Refer to Telegram’s Terms of Service and Privacy Policy for details on how Telegram handles the sign-in.
Screenshots
Configure bot credentials, sign-up policy, email handling, and optional permissions.
Instructions show the Redirect URI and Trusted Origin for @BotFather.
The WordPress login form gains a Sign in with Telegram button.
User profiles can connect or disconnect Telegram.
The Users list can show Telegram-verified phone numbers.

