Elixir Boilerplates

Explore 2 boilerplates in this collection. Find the perfect starting point for your next project.

Visit website for Petal

Petal

Tools to help you rapidly build Phoenix web applications without worrying about design or reinventing the wheel.

Elixir
HEEX
Tailwind CSS
Stripe
LiveView
Phoenix

Features:

Admin
AI
Auth
Charts
CRUD
Deployment
Emails
+7 more
Visit website for LiveSAASKit

LiveSAASKit

SAAS Starter Kit built for Elixir and Phoenix LiveView

Elixir
Tailwind CSS
PostgreSQL
Stripe
Phoenix

Features:

Auth
CI/CD
Docs
i18n
Multi-Tenancy
OAuth
Testing
+1 more

Why Choose Elixir Boilerplates?

Elixir brings powerful language-level features like strong typing, modern async patterns, and a mature ecosystem to SaaS development. Our Elixir boilerplates leverage the language's unique strengths—from its runtime characteristics to its package management—providing optimized starter kits that follow Elixir's idioms and best practices.

Elixir boilerplates are architected around the language's runtime model and package ecosystem. They implement Elixir-specific patterns for concurrent operations, memory management, and error handling. The codebase leverages Elixir's type system for compile-time safety, uses native package managers for dependency management, and includes language-optimized build toolchains. This foundation ensures your application follows Elixir conventions while maximizing performance.

Key Benefits

  • Elixir-native concurrency and async patterns
  • Type-safe code with Elixir's type system
  • Elixir ecosystem packages and tools
  • Optimized Elixir build and compilation
  • Elixir-idiomatic code patterns
  • Performance tuned for Elixir runtime
  • Elixir testing frameworks and coverage
  • Elixir version compatibility management

Browse our collection of 2 Elixir 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.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Elixir ideal for SaaS development?

Elixir excels in SaaS development due to its robust ecosystem, strong typing capabilities, and excellent library support. Elixir 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.

What Elixir-specific tools and libraries are included?

Elixir 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 Elixir. You'll get pre-configured toolchains that enforce best practices, automated testing pipelines, and development environments optimized for Elixir development workflows.

How does Elixir handle scalability compared to other languages?

Elixir scales through proven architectural patterns and language-optimized strategies. The boilerplates implement Elixir-specific scaling techniques including efficient memory management, concurrent processing, and optimized compilation. You get patterns for horizontal scaling, caching strategies, and database connection pooling tailored to Elixir's runtime characteristics.

What's the learning curve for Elixir SaaS development?

If you're already familiar with Elixir, you can start building immediately. The boilerplates use idiomatic Elixir code and follow community conventions, making them easy to understand and extend. New to Elixir? Expect 2-4 weeks to become comfortable with the syntax and ecosystem, but the boilerplate's structure and documentation will accelerate your learning significantly.

Are there any Elixir version compatibility concerns?

Elixir boilerplates specify exact version requirements to ensure compatibility. Most target the latest stable Elixir release with long-term support, ensuring security updates and community support for years. Version upgrade paths are documented, and the codebases use stable APIs that minimize breaking changes during updates.