Planning for customer identity and access management

Applies to: White circle with a gray X symbol. Workforce tenants Green circle with a white check mark symbol. External tenants (learn more)

Microsoft Entra External ID is a customizable, extensible solution for adding customer identity and access management (CIAM) to your app. Because it's built on the Microsoft Entra platform, you benefit from consistency in app integration, tenant management, and operations across your workforce and customer scenarios. When designing your configuration, it's important to understand the components of an external tenant and the Microsoft Entra features that are available for your customer scenarios.

This article provides a general framework for integrating your app and configuring External ID. It describes the capabilities available in an external tenant and outlines the important planning considerations for each step in your integration.

Adding secure sign-in to your app and setting up a customer identity and access management involves four main steps:

Diagram showing an overview of steps.

This article describes each of these steps and outlines important planning considerations. In the following table, select a Step for details and planning considerations, or go directly to the How-to guides.

Step How-to guides
Step 1: Create an external tenant Create an external tenant
Or start a free trial
Step 2: Register your application Register your application
Step 3: Integrate a sign-in flow with your app Create a user flow
Add your app to the user flow
Step 4: Customize and secure your sign-in Customize branding
Add identity providers
Collect attributes during sign-up
Add attributes to the token
Add multifactor authentication (MFA)

Step 1: Create an external tenant

Diagram showing step 1 in the setup flow.

An external tenant is the first resource you need to create to get started with Microsoft Entra External ID. Your external tenant is where you register your application. It also contains a directory where you manage customer identities and access, separate from your workforce tenant.

When you create an external tenant, you can set your correct geographic location and your domain name. If you currently use Azure AD B2C, the new workforce and external tenant model doesn't affect your existing Azure AD B2C tenants.

User accounts in an external tenant

The directory in an external tenant contains admin and customer user accounts. You can create and manage admin accounts for your external tenant. Customer accounts are typically created through self-service sign-up, but you can create and manage customer local accounts.

Customer accounts have a default set of permissions. Customers are restricted from accessing information about other users in the external tenant. By default, customers can’t access information about other users, groups, or devices.

How to create an external tenant

Step 2: Register your application

Diagram showing step 2 in the setup flow.

Before your applications can interact with External ID, you need to register them in your external tenant. Microsoft Entra ID performs identity and access management only for registered applications. Registering your app establishes a trust relationship and allows you to integrate your app with External ID.

Then, to complete the trust relationship between Microsoft Entra ID and your app, you update your application source code with the values assigned during app registration, such as the application (client) ID, directory (tenant) subdomain, and client secret.

We provide code sample guides and in-depth integration guides for several app types and languages. Depending on the type of app you want to register, you can find guidance on our Samples by app type and language page.

How to register your application

Step 3: Integrate a sign-in flow with your app

Diagram showing step 3 in the setup flow.

Once you've set up your external tenant and registered your application, create a sign-up and sign-in user flow. Then integrate your application with the user flow so that anyone who accesses it goes through the sign-up and sign-in experience you've designed.

To integrate your application with a user flow, you add your application to the user flow properties and update your application code with your tenant information and authorization endpoint.

Authentication flow

When a customer attempts to sign in to your application, the application sends an authorization request to the endpoint you provided when you associated the app with the user flow. The user flow defines and controls the customer's sign-in experience.

If the user is signing in for the first time, they're presented with the sign-up experience. They enter information based on the built-in or custom user attributes you've chosen to collect.

When sign-up is complete, Microsoft Entra ID generates a token and redirects the customer to your application. A customer account is created for the customer in the directory.

Sign-up and sign-in user flow

When planning your sign-up and sign-in experience, determine your requirements:

  • Number of user flows. Each application can have just one sign-up and sign-in user flow. If you have several applications, you can use a single user flow for all of them. Or, if you want a different experience for each application, you can create multiple user flows. The maximum is 10 user flows per external tenant.

  • Company branding and language customizations. Although we describe configuring company branding and language customizations later in Step 4, you can configure them anytime, either before or after you integrate an app with a user flow. If you configure company branding before you create the user flow, the sign-in pages reflect that branding. Otherwise, the sign-in pages reflect the default, neutral branding.

  • Attributes to collect. In the user flow settings, you can select from a set of built-in user attributes you want to collect from customers. The customer enters the information on the sign-up page, and it's stored with their profile in your directory. If you want to collect more information, you can define custom attributes and add them to your user flow.

  • Terms and conditions consent. You can use custom user attributes to prompt users to accept your terms and conditions. For example, you can add checkboxes to your sign-up form and include links to your terms of use and privacy policies.

  • Requirements for token claims. If your application requires specific user attributes, you can include them in the token sent to your application.

  • Identity providers. You can set up social identity providers like Google and Facebook or a custom-configured OpenID Connect (OIDC) identity provider. Then, you can add them to your user flow as sign-in options

How to integrate a user flow with your app

Step 4: Customize and secure your sign-in

Diagram showing step 4 in the setup flow.

When planning for configuring company branding, language customizations, and custom extensions, consider the following points:

  • Company branding. After creating a new external tenant, you can customize the appearance of your web-based applications for customers who sign in or sign up, to personalize their end-user experience. In Microsoft Entra ID, the default Microsoft branding appear in your sign-in pages before you customize any settings. This branding represents the global look and feel that applies across all sign-ins to your tenant. Learn more about customizing the sign-in look and feel.

  • Extending the authentication token claims. External ID is designed for flexibility. You can use a custom authentication extension to add claims from external systems to the application token just before the token is issued to the application. Learn more about adding your own business logic with custom authentication extensions.

  • Multifactor authentication (MFA). You can also enable application access security by enforcing MFA, which adds a critical second layer of security to user sign-ins by requiring verification via email one-time passcode. Learn more about available MFA authentication methods.

  • Native authentication. Native authentication enables you to host the user interface in the client application instead of delegating authentication to browsers. Learn more about native authentication in External ID.

  • Security and governance. Learn about security and governance features available in your external tenant, such as Microsoft Entra ID Protection.

How to customize and secure your sign-in

Next steps