Checking if a user is logged into Drupal (the right way)

I see this regularly when working on Drupal sites when someone wants to check whether the current user is logged in to Drupal (authenticated) or not (anonymous).

global $user;
if ($user->uid) {
  // The user is logged in.
}

or

global $user;
if (!$user->uid) {
  // The user is not logged in.
}

The better way to do this is to use the user_is_logged_in() function.

if (user_is_logged_in()) {
  // Do something.
}

This returns a boolean (TRUE or FALSE) depending or not the user is logged in. Essentially, it does the same thing as the first example, but there's no need to load the global variable.

A great use case for this is within a hook_menu() implementation within a custom module.

/**
 * Implements hook_menu().
 */
function mymodule_menu() {
  $items['foo'] = array(
    'title' => 'Foo',
    'page callback' => 'mymodule_foo',
    'access callback' => 'user_is_logged_in',
  );

  return $items;
}

There is also a user_is_anonymous() function if you want the opposite result. Both of these functions are available in Drupal 6 and higher.

Was this useful?

Sign up here and get more like this delivered straight to your inbox every day.

About me

Picture of Oliver

I'm an Acquia-certified Drupal Triple Expert with 17 years of experience, an open-source software maintainer and Drupal core contributor, public speaker, live streamer, and host of the Beyond Blocks podcast.