PostgreSQL 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 PostgreSQL listings only — 3 match. PostgreSQL is a popular stack for this use case.

3 quality-scored listings.

Picking PostgreSQL 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 PostgreSQL subset specifically, the strongest listings target current PostgreSQL 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 "PostgreSQL" tag confirms it works in the PostgreSQL ecosystem natively.

Frequently asked questions

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

PostgreSQL is the most-traded stack on CodeCudos for next.js blog templates. Picking a PostgreSQL-based listing means the code drops into your existing PostgreSQL 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.

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.