
NetCoreSaaS
SaaS Codebase on .NET with Vue, React, Svelte and Tailwind CSS
Features:
Explore 2 boilerplates in this collection. Find the perfect starting point for your next project.

SaaS Codebase on .NET with Vue, React, Svelte and Tailwind CSS
Features:

The Ultimate .NET SaaS Starter Kit Built for Speed and Scale
Features:
.NET provides a comprehensive framework architecture with built-in routing, middleware, and ORM integration tailored for SaaS development. Our .NET boilerplates implement the framework's conventions—from its MVC/API structure to its plugin ecosystem—giving you a production-ready foundation that leverages .NET's specific strengths in web application development.
.NET boilerplates are structured around the framework's architecture patterns and conventions. They integrate .NET's native ORM/query builder with optimized models and relationships, implement the framework's middleware pipeline for authentication and validation, and use framework-specific packages for caching, queues, and background jobs. The routing structure follows .NET's conventions, ensuring predictable code organization as your SaaS scales.
Browse our collection of 2 .NET boilerplates to find the perfect starting point for your next SaaS project. Each boilerplate has been carefully reviewed to ensure quality, security, and production-readiness.
.NET boilerplates leverage the framework's native architecture patterns including its routing system, middleware pipeline, and controller/handler structure. They implement .NET's conventions for separating concerns, dependency injection, and service layer patterns. The codebase follows .NET's best practices for organizing models, views/components, and business logic to ensure maintainability as your application grows.
.NET 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 .NET's specific features like eager loading, query scopes, and transaction handling for performance.
.NET boilerplates are optimized for the framework's ideal deployment platforms. This includes containerization with Docker, serverless configurations (if supported), CDN integration, and environment-specific builds. They include .NET-specific deployment configurations for platforms like Vercel (Next.js), Heroku (Rails), Platform.sh (Laravel), or cloud providers with proper build steps, environment variables, and scaling configurations.
.NET boilerplates include essential framework-specific middleware and plugins for authentication (Passport, NextAuth, Devise, etc.), rate limiting, CORS, session management, and request validation. They leverage .NET's ecosystem with popular packages for tasks like job queuing, caching, email handling, and file uploads—all configured with production-ready settings and proper error handling.
.NET boilerplates target the latest stable framework version and follow the framework's upgrade guidelines. They're structured to minimize breaking changes when updating .NET versions—using stable APIs, avoiding deprecated features, and documenting any version-specific dependencies. Most include update guides for migrating to newer .NET versions while maintaining your custom features.