JavaScript Frontend Frameworks Tier List (2026)

Nextjs
Nextjs
Best overall production framework right now. It keeps all the major advantages: file-based routing, Server and Client Components, SSR, caching, and revalidation. The biggest strength is the React ecosystem, which is by far the largest in frontend, with huge library availability and many qualified professionals. The downside is Vercel lock-in around part of the experience and the forced direction toward Turbopack.

Nuxtjs
Nuxtjs
One of the most complete and polished full-stack frontend frameworks today. It offers SSR, routing, API capabilities, and a very cohesive developer experience out of the box. Even though its ecosystem is much smaller than React’s, it is still strong and especially attractive for ecommerce projects. It feels particularly relevant in European-market style implementations.

Astrojs
Astrojs
Astro is easily one of the best frameworks for Core Web Vitals and SEO. It has excellent SSR and is perfect for content-heavy, server-first, MPA-style websites. The limitation is that once you push it toward SPA behavior through islands, you usually end up pulling in React, Svelte, or another stack. That weakens part of Astro’s original purpose.

Sveltekit
Sveltekit
SvelteKit is sensational and one of the nicest frameworks to work with today. It is fast, elegant, and has excellent DX. The only reason it does not rank higher is the much smaller ecosystem compared to Next.js and Nuxt, plus a lower number of experienced professionals in the market. The framework quality itself is not the problem.

Tanstackstart
Tanstackstart
TanStack Start is only in A tier because it is still young. The project is extremely ambitious and is backed by a broader ecosystem that already includes TanStack Query, Router, and more. It already feels bigger than just a framework and has real long-term potential. What it mainly needs is time and market maturity.

Angular
Angular
Still one of the strongest choices for large and structured applications. It shines in enterprise environments thanks to its architecture, conventions, and mature tooling. It is not higher mainly because it feels heavier and less flexible for smaller teams. Still, as a full framework, it remains extremely solid.

Remix
Remix
Remix is one of the most technically respected frameworks on this list. It has a strong server-first model, great use of web standards, and an excellent forms/data flow story. It is highly appreciated by experienced developers, but it does not have the same mainstream market weight as Next.js or Nuxt. Very strong technically, smaller commercially.

Qwik City
Qwik City
Qwik City is one of the most ambitious frontend frameworks today. Its resumability model is genuinely innovative and gives it a unique performance story. It deserves respect for the technical vision, but it is still earlier in adoption and ecosystem maturity than the frameworks above it. Huge potential, but not fully proven yet.

Solidstart
Solidstart
SolidStart is technically very promising and benefits from Solid’s excellent reactivity model. The reason it stays here is not framework quality, but market size, ecosystem depth, and lower hiring availability. It is still much smaller than the top frameworks in real-world adoption. Strong idea, limited reach for now.

Gatsby
Gatsby
Not officially dead, but it lost a huge amount of momentum. The market moved heavily toward Next.js and Astro, and Gatsby no longer feels like a serious default choice for new projects.

Aurelia
Aurelia
Very small ecosystem and low market relevance today. Hard to justify for new projects when modern alternatives have much stronger adoption, tooling, and hiring availability.