Next.js next.js blog templates

A Next.js blog template gives you the content pipeline, SEO metadata, and reading experience already built — so you write posts, not infrastructure. Filtered to Next.js listings only — 15 match. Next.js is the default full-stack React framework — and the most common foundation for SaaS boilerplates, dashboards, and content sites on CodeCudos.

15 quality-scored listings.

Picking Next.js for next.js blog templates

Quality Next.js blog templates handle the full SEO surface: metadata exports per post (title, description, Open Graph image, canonical URL), a generated sitemap.xml, structured data (BlogPosting JSON-LD), and RSS feed. The best templates use MDX for content — write Markdown, embed React components where needed (code demos, callout boxes, charts). Look for templates that implement proper reading time calculation, previous/next post navigation, and tag or category filtering. Image handling matters: posts should accept a hero image with automatic WebP conversion and blur placeholders via Next.js Image. For teams, look for templates with draft post support — posts not published don't appear in production but can be previewed locally. Avoid templates where all posts are in a single flat directory with no frontmatter validation — this breaks as the post count grows. For the Next.js subset specifically, the strongest listings target current Next.js versions, ship with TypeScript types where applicable, and document any framework-specific gotchas (deployment adapters, runtime requirements, etc.). Check the quality score and the listing's stack tags before buying — a "Next.js" tag confirms it works in the Next.js ecosystem natively.

Frequently asked questions

Why pick a Next.js-based next.js blog template?

Next.js is the most-traded stack on CodeCudos for next.js blog templates. Picking a Next.js-based listing means the code drops into your existing Next.js project without framework-level rewrites — and the ecosystem of complementary libraries (auth, payments, ORM) is mature and well-documented.

Does the template work with a headless CMS?

Most Next.js blog templates on CodeCudos are file-based (MDX files in the repo). Some integrate with Sanity, Contentlayer, or Hygraph for a CMS editing UI. Check the listing description for 'CMS', 'Sanity', or 'Contentlayer' if you need non-developer editing.

Does the blog template include comments?

Most don't include comments by default — they typically suggest Giscus (GitHub Discussions-based) or Disqus as an add-on. The better templates document how to add Giscus in a few minutes.

App Router or Pages Router?

App Router is the current default. New listings should target App Router with server components. Pages Router listings work but are on the legacy side of the curve.

Do Next.js listings include authentication?

Most full-stack boilerplates do — typically NextAuth, Auth.js (the rename), or Clerk. Component-only listings usually don't.

How does the 14-day refund work?

Request a refund within 14 days from your dashboard. We'll approve refunds when the code doesn't match the listing description or has critical bugs that prevent normal use.