PlanetScale

PlanetScale Security Risks

Know the risks before you deploy. Understanding PlanetScale security vulnerabilities is the first step to building secure applications.

Instant results. See which risks apply to you.

2
Critical Risks
2
High Risks
0
Medium Risks
1
Low Risks

Every platform has security risks—the key is understanding them. PlanetScale applications face specific vulnerabilities that, if left unaddressed, can lead to data breaches, financial loss, and reputational damage. This guide covers the real risks and practical mitigations.

PlanetScale Security Risks

#1No Row Level Security

high

MySQL/Vitess doesn't have RLS—must implement in application.

Likelihood:high
Impact:high
Mitigation

Build access control in application layer. Filter all queries by user.

#2Branch Promotion Risks

high

Vulnerable schema changes can be promoted to production.

Likelihood:medium
Impact:high
Mitigation

Use Deploy Requests with approval for production changes.

#3Connection String Exposure

critical

PlanetScale credentials grant full database access.

Likelihood:high
Impact:critical
Mitigation

Store in environment variables. Rotate if exposed.

#4SQL Injection

critical

String concatenation in queries enables injection.

Likelihood:medium
Impact:critical
Mitigation

Use parameterized queries with ? placeholders.

#5Shared Infrastructure

low

Free tier runs on shared resources.

Likelihood:low
Impact:low
Mitigation

Use production tier for compliance workloads.

Who Is Most At Risk?

highProduction apps with user data

Real user data at risk of exposure

highApps processing payments

Financial and PCI compliance implications

highApps using third-party APIs

Exposed keys lead to abuse and charges

mediumInternal business tools

May contain sensitive business data

lowDemo and portfolio projects

Limited data but teaches insecure patterns

How to Reduce These Risks

Most PlanetScale security risks are preventable with proper configuration. The majority of vulnerabilities we find are not complex exploits—they're missing settings and exposed credentials that automated scanning catches instantly.

  • Run automated security scans before every deployment
  • Configure database access controls from day one
  • Store all secrets in environment variables
  • Enable email verification and strong password requirements
  • Add security headers to your hosting configuration
  • Review AI-generated code for security before accepting

Know Your Actual Risk Level

Stop guessing. Run a scan to see which PlanetScale security risks actually affect your app. Starter Scans from $5.

Get Starter Scan

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the biggest security risks with PlanetScale?

The most critical PlanetScale risks are: exposed credentials/API keys, missing database access controls, and weak authentication. These account for the majority of real-world breaches in PlanetScale applications.

How likely is my PlanetScale app to be attacked?

If your app is public on the internet, it's being scanned constantly. Automated tools probe for common vulnerabilities within minutes of deployment. The question isn't if you'll be scanned, but whether attackers will find anything exploitable.

Can I use PlanetScale safely for production?

Yes, with proper security configuration. PlanetScale provides the tools for secure applications—you need to use them correctly. Configure access controls, manage secrets properly, add security headers, and scan before launch.

How do I reduce security risks in my PlanetScale app?

Start with a security scan to identify current vulnerabilities. Then: 1) Fix critical issues first (exposed secrets, missing access controls), 2) Enable email verification and strong passwords, 3) Add security headers, 4) Set up continuous scanning.

Are PlanetScale security risks different from other platforms?

The core risks are similar across vibe coding platforms—they all have exposed secrets, missing access controls, and auth weaknesses. PlanetScale-specific risks relate to its particular tech stack and default configurations.

Last updated: January 16, 2026