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Non-opinionated TypeScript starter for Next.js 15. All the tools you need to build your next project ⚡️

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Next.js TypeScript Starter


Non-opinionated TypeScript starter for Next.js
Highly scalable foundation with the best DX. All the tools you need to build your next project.

Created by João Pedro with the help of many wonderful contributors.

Features

  • ⚡️ Next.js 15 (App Router)
  • ⚛️ React 19
  • ⛑ TypeScript
  • 📏 ESLint 9 — To find and fix problems in your code
  • 💖 Prettier — Code Formatter for consistent style
  • 🐶 Husky — For running scripts before committing
  • 🚓 Commitlint — To make sure your commit messages follow the convention
  • 🖌 Renovate — To keep your dependencies up to date
  • 🚫 lint-staged — Run ESLint and Prettier against staged Git files
  • 👷 PR Workflow — Run Type Check & Linters on Pull Requests
  • ⚙️ EditorConfig - Consistent coding styles across editors and IDEs
  • 🗂 Path Mapping — Import components or images using the @ prefix
  • 🔐 CSP — Content Security Policy for enhanced security (default minimal policy)
  • 🧳 T3 Env — Type-safe environment variables
  • 🪧 Redirects — Easily add redirects to your application

Quick Start

The best way to start with this template is using Create Next App.

# pnpm
pnpm create next-app -e https://github.com/jpedroschmitz/typescript-nextjs-starter
# yarn
yarn create next-app -e https://github.com/jpedroschmitz/typescript-nextjs-starter
# npm
npx create-next-app -e https://github.com/jpedroschmitz/typescript-nextjs-starter

Development

To start the project locally, run:

pnpm dev

Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

Testimonials

“This starter is by far the best TypeScript starter for Next.js. Feature packed but un-opinionated at the same time!”
— Arafat Zahan

“I can really recommend the Next.js Typescript Starter repo as a solid foundation for your future Next.js projects.”
— Corfitz

“Brilliant work!”
— Soham Dasgupta

Showcase

List of websites that started off with Next.js TypeScript Starter:

Documentation

Requirements

  • Node.js >= 20
  • pnpm 9

Directory Structure

  • .github — GitHub configuration including the CI workflow.
  • .husky — Husky configuration and hooks.
  • public — Static assets such as robots.txt, images, and favicon.
  • src — Application source code, including pages, components, styles.

Scripts

  • pnpm dev — Starts the application in development mode at http://localhost:3000.
  • pnpm build — Creates an optimized production build of your application.
  • pnpm start — Starts the application in production mode.
  • pnpm type-check — Validate code using TypeScript compiler.
  • pnpm lint — Runs ESLint for all files in the src directory.
  • pnpm lint:fix — Runs ESLint fix for all files in the src directory.
  • pnpm format — Runs Prettier for all files in the src directory.
  • pnpm format:check — Check Prettier list of files that need to be formatted.
  • pnpm format:ci — Prettier check for CI.

Path Mapping

TypeScript are pre-configured with custom path mappings. To import components or files, use the @ prefix.

import { Button } from '@/components/Button';
// To import images or other files from the public folder
import avatar from '@/public/avatar.png';

Switch to Yarn/npm

This starter uses pnpm by default, but this choice is yours. If you'd like to switch to Yarn/npm, delete the pnpm-lock.yaml file, install the dependencies with Yarn/npm, change the CI workflow, and Husky Git hooks to use Yarn/npm commands.

Note: If you use Yarn, make sure to follow these steps from the Husky documentation so that Git hooks do not fail with Yarn on Windows.

Environment Variables

We use T3 Env to manage environment variables. Create a .env.local file in the root of the project and add your environment variables there.

When adding additional environment variables, the schema in ./src/lib/env/client.ts or ./src/lib/env/server.ts should be updated accordingly.

Redirects

To add redirects, update the redirects array in ./redirects.ts. It's typed, so you'll get autocompletion for the properties.

CSP (Content Security Policy)

The Content Security Policy (CSP) is a security layer that helps to detect and mitigate certain types of attacks, including Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) and data injection attacks. The CSP is implemented in the next.config.ts file.

It contains a default and minimal policy that you can customize to fit your application needs. It's a foundation to build upon.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for more information.