# Form Data When you need to receive form fields instead of JSON, you can use `Form`. !!! info To use forms, first install `python-multipart`. E.g. `pip install python-multipart`. ## Import `Form` Import `Form` from `fastapi`: === "Python 3.9+" ```Python hl_lines="3" {!> ../../../docs_src/request_forms/tutorial001_an_py39.py!} ``` === "Python 3.8+" ```Python hl_lines="1" {!> ../../../docs_src/request_forms/tutorial001_an.py!} ``` === "Python 3.8+ non-Annotated" !!! tip Prefer to use the `Annotated` version if possible. ```Python hl_lines="1" {!> ../../../docs_src/request_forms/tutorial001.py!} ``` ## Define `Form` parameters Create form parameters the same way you would for `Body` or `Query`: === "Python 3.9+" ```Python hl_lines="9" {!> ../../../docs_src/request_forms/tutorial001_an_py39.py!} ``` === "Python 3.8+" ```Python hl_lines="8" {!> ../../../docs_src/request_forms/tutorial001_an.py!} ``` === "Python 3.8+ non-Annotated" !!! tip Prefer to use the `Annotated` version if possible. ```Python hl_lines="7" {!> ../../../docs_src/request_forms/tutorial001.py!} ``` For example, in one of the ways the OAuth2 specification can be used (called "password flow") it is required to send a `username` and `password` as form fields. The spec requires the fields to be exactly named `username` and `password`, and to be sent as form fields, not JSON. With `Form` you can declare the same configurations as with `Body` (and `Query`, `Path`, `Cookie`), including validation, examples, an alias (e.g. `user-name` instead of `username`), etc. !!! info `Form` is a class that inherits directly from `Body`. !!! tip To declare form bodies, you need to use `Form` explicitly, because without it the parameters would be interpreted as query parameters or body (JSON) parameters. ## About "Form Fields" The way HTML forms (`
`) sends the data to the server normally uses a "special" encoding for that data, it's different from JSON. **FastAPI** will make sure to read that data from the right place instead of JSON. !!! note "Technical Details" Data from forms is normally encoded using the "media type" `application/x-www-form-urlencoded`. But when the form includes files, it is encoded as `multipart/form-data`. You'll read about handling files in the next chapter. If you want to read more about these encodings and form fields, head to the MDN web docs forPOST
.
!!! warning
You can declare multiple `Form` parameters in a *path operation*, but you can't also declare `Body` fields that you expect to receive as JSON, as the request will have the body encoded using `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` instead of `application/json`.
This is not a limitation of **FastAPI**, it's part of the HTTP protocol.
## Recap
Use `Form` to declare form data input parameters.