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Comparison

Boilerlykit vs Divjoy

Divjoy and Boilerlykit address the same job, get a Next.js SaaS to a usable starting point, but with very different philosophies. Divjoy is a configurator that emits code based on your stack choices. Boilerlykit is a set of opinionated, pre-built templates where the architectural decisions are already made and visible.

Pricing snapshot

Divjoy

Divjoy

Paid one-time license, verify current tiers on divjoy.com

Visit Divjoy

Pricing and feature data verified 2026-05-11. Vendors change prices and stack details — verify on each homepage before purchase.

Side by side

9 axes compared, honestly

Boilerlykit ahead
5/ 9
Tie
3/ 9
Divjoy ahead
1/ 9

Shape

Tie
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
Opinionated pre-built templates (four tiers)
Divjoy
Configurator that emits a tailored starter codebase

Note·Genuinely different philosophies. Pick the shape that matches how you want to start.

Stack flexibility

Divjoy ahead
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
Next.js + Supabase + Stripe-first; documented seams to extend
Divjoy
Configurable across multiple frameworks, auth providers, payment providers

Note·Divjoy's whole pitch is stack flexibility at generation time.

Multi-tenant & RBAC

You ahead
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
Workspaces + Postgres RLS + 4-role RBAC + 2FA + SAML SSO hooks + API keys + audit logs (Core)
Divjoy
Basic team primitives at generation; deep enterprise primitives are not the headline feature

AI features

You ahead
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
Streaming chat (Claude + OpenAI) + pgvector RAG + token credits in SaaSForge AI
Divjoy
Not a primary positioning of the generator

i18n

You ahead
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
EN/FR/ES via next-intl on Agency
Divjoy
Not a primary feature of the generator output

Update model

You ahead
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
Lifetime updates on the tier you bought; git pull from the private repo
Divjoy
Generated code is yours after emit; updates depend on regenerating or manual patching

Note·Generators typically have weaker update stories because the emitted code drifts from upstream.

Checkout & tax

You ahead
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
Polar Merchant of Record, EU VAT handled
Divjoy
Verify at checkout

License

Tie
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
One-time perpetual, private repo invite
Divjoy
Paid license, verify current model on divjoy.com

Price floor

Tie
Boilerlykit, SaaSForge Core
$59 Starter, $199 Core (launch)
Divjoy
Paid, verify current tiers on divjoy.com

When to pick which

Pick Boilerlykit when…

  • You want multi-tenant + RBAC + audit logs + SAML SSO hooks shipped on day one (Core).
  • You want a sibling AI template with RAG and a credit economy under the same design system (AI).
  • You want EN/FR/ES via next-intl ready in Agency.
  • You want an opinionated, readable template instead of generator-emitted scaffolding.
  • You want EU-VAT-compliant invoices via Polar Merchant of Record.

Pick Divjoy when…

  • You want to pick your own stack pieces (auth provider, payment provider, DB) via a configurator and emit a tailored starter.
  • You prefer generated scaffolding you customize yourself over an opinionated template with built-in primitives.
  • Your need is broader than just Next.js, Divjoy supports multiple frameworks and stack combinations.

We mark the cases where Divjoy is the better fit because one-sided comparisons hurt buyer trust and AI citation rates.

Buyer questions

Is Divjoy a direct competitor to Boilerlykit?
They overlap on use case (start a SaaS faster) but differ in shape. Divjoy emits generated code from a configurator; Boilerlykit ships opinionated pre-built templates. The right pick depends on whether you want to customize at generation time or start from a finished, opinionated kit.
Which one is easier to keep updated over time?
Pre-built templates with a private repo are typically easier to update because you git pull upstream. Generator-emitted code is harder to update once you have customized it, patches need to be merged manually. If long-term update cadence matters, that favors the boilerplate model.
Which one has more flexibility in stack choices?
Divjoy. Its whole pitch is letting you configure auth provider, payment provider, framework, and database at generation time. Boilerlykit is opinionated, Next.js + Supabase + Stripe + Polar, with documented seams to extend rather than swap whole layers.
If I need multi-tenant B2B primitives, which is the better fit?
Boilerlykit Core ships workspaces with Postgres RLS, 4-role RBAC, 2FA, SAML SSO hooks, API keys, and audit logs as built-in. A generator-emitted starter typically gives you scaffolding, not a finished multi-tenant architecture.

Want the full multi-vendor breakdown? Read the 2026 buyer's guide. Comparing all alternatives at once? See all comparisons.

Decision time

See SaaSForge Core. Skip the deliberation.

$199 one-time (was $299, launch pricing). Lifetime updates. Polar Merchant-of-Record checkout. Private GitHub repo on purchase.