The complete Nuxt starter kit to build a robust and market-ready SaaS
Nuxt SaaS Kit is a Nuxt boilerplate designed for developers eager to build SaaS products efficiently. It provides all the important building blocks, allowing you to concentrate on your business.
Save Time, Build Faster
Skip the boring and repetitive stuff and get straight to building your product. Turbocharge your development with Nuxt SaaS Kit.
Focus On Things That Matter
Created by developers, for developers, Nuxt SaaS Kit provides all the essential features needed to launch your startup quickly, including authentication, database integration, email functionality, payment processing, styling components, and more.
Why choose Nuxt SaaS Kit?
Easy to use - Intuitive design ensures easy setup with minimal effort
Launch Fast - Accelerate development and ship faster without compromising quality
Budget-Friendly - Kickstart your SaaS without breaking the bank
Support & Documentation - Detailed docs and responsive support team
Customizable - Highly flexible to adapt to your specific needs
Lifetime Free Updates - Continuous improvements at no extra cost
JavaScript excels in SaaS development due to its robust ecosystem, strong typing capabilities, and excellent library support. JavaScript boilerplates leverage language-specific features to provide type-safe database queries, efficient API routing, and optimized runtime performance. The language's maturity means you get battle-tested packages for authentication, payment processing, and background jobs that integrate seamlessly.
TypeScript
What makes TypeScript ideal for SaaS development?
TypeScript excels in SaaS development due to its robust ecosystem, strong typing capabilities, and excellent library support. TypeScript boilerplates leverage language-specific features to provide type-safe database queries, efficient API routing, and optimized runtime performance. The language's maturity means you get battle-tested packages for authentication, payment processing, and background jobs that integrate seamlessly.
Nuxt
What Nuxt-specific architecture patterns are implemented?
Nuxt boilerplates leverage the framework's native architecture patterns including its routing system, middleware pipeline, and controller/handler structure. They implement Nuxt's conventions for separating concerns, dependency injection, and service layer patterns. The codebase follows Nuxt's best practices for organizing models, views/components, and business logic to ensure maintainability as your application grows.
Vue.js
What Vue.js-specific architecture patterns are implemented?
Vue.js boilerplates leverage the framework's native architecture patterns including its routing system, middleware pipeline, and controller/handler structure. They implement Vue.js's conventions for separating concerns, dependency injection, and service layer patterns. The codebase follows Vue.js's best practices for organizing models, views/components, and business logic to ensure maintainability as your application grows.
Tailwind CSS
What Tailwind CSS-specific component architecture is used?
Tailwind CSS boilerplates follow the framework's component composition patterns with reusable, atomic design components. They implement Tailwind CSS's best practices for component structure, props handling, event management, and lifecycle methods. The component library includes authentication flows, dashboards, data tables, forms with validation, and navigation—all built with Tailwind CSS's native features like hooks (React), composition API (Vue), or directives (Angular).
Supabase
What Supabase-specific features are leveraged in these boilerplates?
Supabase boilerplates utilize the database's native capabilities including its transaction model (ACID for SQL, eventual consistency for NoSQL), indexing strategies (B-tree, GiST, full-text search), and advanced features like JSON columns, array types, window functions, or document queries. The schema design takes advantage of Supabase's strengths—whether that's PostgreSQL's JSONB, MySQL's full-text search, MongoDB's aggregation pipeline, or Redis's data structures.
Lemon Squeezy
What Lemon Squeezy API features are implemented?
Lemon Squeezy boilerplates implement the provider's complete API suite including checkout sessions, subscription lifecycle management, customer portal, webhook event handling, and invoice generation. They use Lemon Squeezy's latest API version with proper error handling, idempotency keys, and retry logic. The integration includes Lemon Squeezy-specific features like payment intents, setup intents, subscription schedules, and tax calculation APIs.
JavaScript
What JavaScript-specific tools and libraries are included?
JavaScript boilerplates include the language's most popular and production-proven tools. This typically includes testing frameworks, linters, formatters, build tools, and package managers specific to JavaScript. You'll get pre-configured toolchains that enforce best practices, automated testing pipelines, and development environments optimized for JavaScript development workflows.
TypeScript
What TypeScript-specific tools and libraries are included?
TypeScript boilerplates include the language's most popular and production-proven tools. This typically includes testing frameworks, linters, formatters, build tools, and package managers specific to TypeScript. You'll get pre-configured toolchains that enforce best practices, automated testing pipelines, and development environments optimized for TypeScript development workflows.
Nuxt
How does Nuxt's ORM/database layer work in these boilerplates?
Nuxt boilerplates use the framework's native ORM or query builder (Prisma, Eloquent, Active Record, SQLAlchemy, etc.) with pre-configured models for users, subscriptions, teams, and common SaaS entities. They include optimized queries, relationships, migrations, seeders, and database connection pooling. The implementation leverages Nuxt's specific features like eager loading, query scopes, and transaction handling for performance.
Vue.js
How does Vue.js's ORM/database layer work in these boilerplates?
Vue.js boilerplates use the framework's native ORM or query builder (Prisma, Eloquent, Active Record, SQLAlchemy, etc.) with pre-configured models for users, subscriptions, teams, and common SaaS entities. They include optimized queries, relationships, migrations, seeders, and database connection pooling. The implementation leverages Vue.js's specific features like eager loading, query scopes, and transaction handling for performance.
Tailwind CSS
How is state management handled in Tailwind CSS boilerplates?
Tailwind CSS boilerplates use the framework's recommended state management approach—whether that's React Context + hooks, Redux Toolkit, Zustand, Pinia (Vue), NgRx (Angular), or Svelte stores. They include pre-configured state slices for authentication, user data, subscriptions, and UI state with proper TypeScript typing. The implementation follows Tailwind CSS's patterns for global state, local component state, and server state synchronization.
Supabase
How is the Supabase schema designed for SaaS applications?
Supabase boilerplates include production-tested schemas for multi-tenancy, user management, subscriptions, and billing. The design follows Supabase's best practices for data modeling—whether that's normalized tables with foreign keys (SQL), embedded documents vs. references (MongoDB), or partition key strategies (DynamoDB). Schemas include proper constraints, default values, and relationship management optimized for Supabase's query engine.
Lemon Squeezy
How are Lemon Squeezy webhooks handled securely?
Lemon Squeezy webhooks are verified using the provider's signature validation to prevent spoofing attacks. The boilerplate includes webhook endpoints with proper Lemon Squeezy signature verification, event type filtering, and idempotent event processing to handle duplicate deliveries. Events are processed asynchronously with retry logic, and the implementation handles Lemon Squeezy's specific webhook events like subscription updates, payment failures, and customer changes.