
Ecommerce Boilerplate is one of 43 boilerplates we track, and one of 20 built on NextJS. This review covers what it ships with, what it costs, and where it falls short, based on the structured listing data we maintain for every kit in the directory.
Launch your e-commerce store rapidly with this full-stack NextJS & Node.js boilerplate. Includes a React admin panel, Strapi CMS integration, and features like categorized product display, wishlist, and secure checkout. Save time and build faster.
Ecommerce Boilerplate uses NextJS and NodeJS. NextJS is one of the most common foundations in our catalog (20 kits use it), which means plenty of alternatives exist if Ecommerce Boilerplate doesn't fit, but also that the ecosystem around this stack is well documented.
Ecommerce Boilerplate lists 3 integrations: Auth, Components and Payments. For context, the catalog average is 5 integrations per kit, so Ecommerce Boilerplate is on the leaner side. Leaner is not automatically worse; fewer integrations also means fewer dependencies to maintain or rip out. Worth knowing before you buy: Database is commonly included in comparable kits but not listed for Ecommerce Boilerplate. If you need it, budget the integration time yourself or look at the alternatives page.
Ecommerce Boilerplate starts at $39 and goes up to $63. That sits below the catalog median of $159. One-time pricing for a codebase is hard to evaluate in the abstract; the relevant comparison is your own hourly cost for the setup work it replaces.
Ecommerce Boilerplate makes sense if you are starting a new project on NextJS and the included integrations match your requirements list. Since authentication and payments are both wired up, Ecommerce Boilerplate covers the two integrations that consume the most setup time in a typical SaaS build. Skip it if Database is hard requirements for you; comparable kits include it already.
At 3 integrations against a catalog average of 5, Ecommerce Boilerplate competes on focus rather than breadth. At $39 the decision comes down to whether the included Auth, Components and Payments map onto what your project actually needs. If they do, the price is a rounding error against the build time. If they don't, no boilerplate is a good deal. The main caveat remains the missing Database.
Ready to try Ecommerce Boilerplate?
$39 – $63
Ecommerce Boilerplate costs $39. The catalog median is $159, so it is priced below the market. The real question is requirement fit: check the feature list against your project before looking at the price tag.
NextJS, NodeJS. 20 kits in our catalog use NextJS, so if the rest of this kit doesn't fit, the stack itself won't limit your alternatives.
3 listed integrations: Auth, Components, Payments. The catalog average is 5 per kit. Not included: Database, which you would otherwise find in many comparable kits.
Anyone starting a new NextJS project whose requirements overlap heavily with the included integrations (Auth, Components and Payments). The worse the overlap, the weaker the case: a boilerplate you fight against costs more time than it saves.
Yes. We maintain a ranked list of Ecommerce Boilerplate alternatives based on shared stack and feature overlap. 19 other kits in the catalog use NextJS. See the alternatives page linked below.