| name | tanstack-start-cloudflare-to-vercel |
| description | Migrate a TanStack Start application from Cloudflare Workers to Vercel. Use this skill when a user wants to move, migrate, or port a TanStack Start (or TanStack) app off Cloudflare Workers or Wrangler onto Vercel. This covers swapping the @cloudflare/vite-plugin for Nitro, removing Wrangler config, repointing Cloudflare bindings (R2, Workers KV, D1, Durable Objects, Workers AI) to Vercel storage, and moving Cron Triggers and Queues to their Vercel equivalents, then deploying. Triggers include phrases like 'migrate to Vercel', 'move off Cloudflare', 'TanStack Start Cloudflare to Vercel', or the presence of wrangler.jsonc, wrangler.toml, or cloudflare:workers imports in a TanStack project. Do not use for non-TanStack frameworks or for migrations in the opposite direction (Vercel to Cloudflare). |
| license | Apache-2.0 |
| compatibility | Requires git or the Vercel CLI, and access to the internet |
| allowed-tools | Bash(git:*) Bash(vercel:*) Read |
| metadata | {"author":"vercel","version":"1.0.0","one-liner":"Migrate a TanStack Start app from Cloudflare Workers to Vercel","guide":"https://vercel.com/kb/guide/migrate-a-tanstack-start-app-from-cloudflare-to-vercel"} |
Migrate TanStack Start from Cloudflare to Vercel
What this skill does
Moving a TanStack Start app from Cloudflare Workers to Vercel mostly means swapping the deployment layer, not rewriting the app. The Cloudflare Vite plugin gets replaced with Nitro, the Wrangler config is removed, and storage and scheduled work point at Vercel equivalents. On Vercel, TanStack Start runs on Vercel Functions with Fluid compute on by default, so the app scales with traffic on its own.
The app code (routes, components, server functions) mostly stays the same. The work sits in three places: the Vite and build config, the Wrangler config that gets deleted, and any code that called Cloudflare bindings.
The Vercel Plugin
The user will have installed the Vercel Plugin already, which among other things includes a number of helpful skills that can assist you and the user with this migration. Prefer those skills for current, detailed product guidance, and let this skill drive the order of work. The ones that line up with these steps:
vercel-storage and marketplace: step 4 (Blob, Edge Config, Neon, Upstash, and Marketplace provisioning).
env-vars: steps 4 and 5 (vercel env, .env files, OIDC tokens).
vercel-cli and deployments-cicd: steps 5 and 7 (env vars and deploy).
vercel-functions and workflow: step 6 (Cron Jobs and Workflows).
There are other skills included that may assist with the migration.
Steps the user completes manually
You handle most of the migration directly by editing files and running commands. A few actions need the Vercel dashboard, a Vercel account, or secret values, so the user has to do those:
- Creating the Vercel account (see Before you start).
- Creating and connecting the backing stores in step 4.
- Adding environment variables in step 5, and the
CRON_SECRET in step 6.
- Deploying in step 7.
Guide the user through each of these. Give clear, specific instructions, then wait for them to confirm before moving on. Do not report any of them as done while the user still has to do it.
If you are unsure about a dashboard flow or whether a detail is still current, use an applicable Vercel skill when one is available (see "The Vercel Plugin" above), and check the latest with a web search scoped to the vercel.com domain (for example, site:vercel.com vercel blob oidc token).
Service mapping (quick reference)
Before you start
Check the repo for these, and ask the user to confirm anything the repo cannot show:
- A working TanStack Start app on Cloudflare. Look for
@tanstack/react-start in package.json to confirm the framework before changing anything.
- Node.js 20 or later.
- A Vercel account (the user confirms this; you cannot create one).
- The Vercel CLI, for the env and deploy steps:
npm i -g vercel.
Do not use this skill for a different framework, a brand-new app (set it up for Vercel directly instead), or a move in the other direction (Vercel to Cloudflare).
Steps
Work through these in order. Step 0 tells you which of steps 4 to 6 apply, so you can skip what the app does not use.
Step 0: Audit the current Cloudflare setup
Run the audit script from the project root:
bash scripts/audit.sh /path/to/project
It reports the Wrangler config, every cloudflare:workers import, which bindings are in use (R2, KV, D1, Durable Objects, Workers AI), whether Cron Triggers or Queues are set up, and where the Cloudflare Vite plugin is referenced. Use the output to pick which later steps apply, then show the user a short checklist. Skipping this leads to missed bindings and runtime errors.
Step 1: Replace the Cloudflare Vite plugin with Nitro
Install Nitro:
npm i nitro
In vite.config.ts, replace the cloudflare() plugin with nitro() from nitro/vite, and remove the viteEnvironment option:
import { defineConfig } from 'vite';
import { tanstackStart } from '@tanstack/react-start/plugin/vite';
import { nitro } from 'nitro/vite';
import viteReact from '@vitejs/plugin-react';
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [tanstackStart(), nitro(), viteReact()],
});
Nitro detects Vercel during a Vercel build and applies the vercel preset, so no extra config is needed.
Step 2: Remove the Wrangler configuration
- Delete
wrangler.jsonc or wrangler.toml.
- Uninstall the Cloudflare packages:
npm uninstall @cloudflare/vite-plugin wrangler.
- Remove any
compatibility_date or compatibility_flags. Vercel Functions run on Node.js, so the nodejs_compat flag has no equivalent.
If the app used a custom server entrypoint (src/server.ts) to export Durable Objects or handle Queue and Cron events, see step 6 and references/service-mapping.md for the Vercel approach.
Step 3: Update the build scripts
In package.json, replace the wrangler deploy script with plain Vite commands, and remove the cf-typegen script:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "vite dev",
"build": "vite build"
}
}
Vercel detects TanStack Start on import and sets the build command and output directory, so the remaining scripts mainly support local development.
Step 4: Replace Cloudflare bindings with Vercel storage
This is the main code change. For every binding the audit found, remove the import { env } from "cloudflare:workers" line and replace the binding call with the matching Vercel SDK call. Read references/service-mapping.md for the before and after code for each binding, then install the SDK you need, for example:
npm i @vercel/blob
Have the user create and connect the backing stores. This is what adds the env vars the code reads, so it has to be done before the app will run:
- R2 to Blob: create a Blob store on the Storage page, then connect it to the project from the store's Projects tab. Vercel adds
BLOB_STORE_ID and a short-lived VERCEL_OIDC_TOKEN that it rotates on every deploy. The SDK pairs the two, so put() needs no token in code. This OIDC approach is recommended over the long-lived BLOB_READ_WRITE_TOKEN, which is only for code that runs outside Vercel.
- Workers KV to Redis: add a Redis integration such as Upstash Redis for caching and session data, or use Edge Config for small, read-heavy config.
- D1 to Postgres: add a Postgres database such as Neon.
Provisioning a store from the Marketplace adds its connection string and credentials as env vars, which the code reads from process.env.
Step 5: Move environment variables and secrets
Cloudflare keeps these in wrangler.jsonc vars and Wrangler secrets. Vercel keeps them per environment: production, preview, and development.
Never handle the user's secrets. Do not ask the user for secret values, and do not accept secrets pasted into the chat. Do not offer to save, enter, or store environment variables or secrets for the user, and refuse if asked to do so. Setting the actual values is the user's job, done in the dashboard or in their own terminal. Your part is to prepare the list of variable names and the exact commands.
You can list every variable and secret to recreate and write out the exact commands, but you cannot supply secret values or sign the CLI in, and you must not make up values.
The user adds each variable, either on the project's Environment Variables page or with the CLI after vercel login:
vercel env add DATABASE_URL production
Once the user has signed in, you can link the project and pull the values into a local .env:
vercel link
vercel env pull
vercel env pull writes a .env file with the development environment variables. Vercel allows up to 64 KB of environment variables per deploy across all variables combined. A variable added to production is not available in preview or development unless it is added there too.
Step 6: Move scheduled tasks and queues (only if the audit found them)
Nitro maps both Cron Triggers and Queues to Vercel features at build time. Skip this step if the app uses neither.
For scheduled work, define Nitro scheduled tasks in nitro.config.ts. Nitro turns them into Vercel Cron Jobs at build, so there is no need to write any vercel.json cron config by hand:
import { defineConfig } from 'nitro';
export default defineConfig({
experimental: {
tasks: true,
},
scheduledTasks: {
'0 * * * *': ['cms:update'],
},
});
The user sets a CRON_SECRET env var in the project (same as step 5). When CRON_SECRET is set, Nitro checks the Authorization header on every cron call.
For message processing, replace Cloudflare Queues with Vercel Queues. Define topics under vercel.queues in nitro.config.ts:
import { defineConfig } from 'nitro';
export default defineConfig({
vercel: {
queues: {
triggers: [{ topic: 'orders' }],
},
},
});
Handle incoming messages with the vercel:queue hook in a Nitro plugin under server/plugins/:
export default defineNitroPlugin((nitro) => {
nitro.hooks.hook('vercel:queue', ({ message, metadata }) => {
console.log(`[${metadata.topicName}] Message ${metadata.messageId}:`, message);
});
});
To send messages, install @vercel/queue and call send() from a server function:
npm i @vercel/queue
const { messageId } = await send('orders', order);
For long-running, multi-step work that Cloudflare Workflows handled, look at Vercel Workflows, which run durable steps on Vercel Functions and Vercel Queues.
Step 7: Deploy
You cannot import a project, confirm the framework preset, sign in, or select Deploy, so walk the user through one of these paths. Both build the app with Nitro's Vercel preset and run it on Vercel Functions.
Deploy with Git (recommended):
- Push the project to GitHub, GitLab, or Bitbucket.
- In the Vercel dashboard, select Add New > Project, then import the repo.
- Vercel detects TanStack Start and sets the build command and output directory. Confirm the framework preset, add the environment variables from step 5, and select Deploy.
After the first import, every push to the production branch creates a production deploy, and every pull request gets its own preview URL.
Deploy with the CLI: after vercel login, run vercel for a preview or vercel --prod for production.
If the vercel-deploy skill is available, you can use it to create a preview deploy and a claim URL without the user signing in first, which is a good way to check the build before wiring up a connected project.
After the move: check these
You can grep for the code issues; ask the user to check anything in the dashboard. See references/troubleshooting.md for fixes.
- No
cloudflare:workers imports remain anywhere in server code.
- Each env var exists in the right environment, not only production.
- Standalone API handlers live under
routes/api/. Nitro's /api convention does not work on Vercel and returns 404.
Tune after migrating (optional)
- Set function resources per route with
vercel.functionRules in nitro.config.ts to override maxDuration, memory, or regions for the routes that need more than the default.
- Put functions near the data: set
regions in functionRules or project settings close to the Marketplace database to cut latency.
References
- service-mapping: Before and after code for each binding (R2 to Blob, KV to Redis or Edge Config, D1 to Postgres, Durable Objects, Workers AI to AI Gateway), plus the store setup notes. Read before step 4.
- troubleshooting: The common errors after the move and how to fix them.