Lucky Media Comparison
Keystatic vs DatoCMS
An honest, side-by-side comparison from a team that has shipped both in production.
Lucky Media Expert Recommendation
For most teams: DatoCMS
DatoCMS is a polished headless CMS with a standout built-in image pipeline and a clean editorial interface. Real-time preview is first-class and collaborative editing is well-implemented, making it a strong choice for media-rich content teams. It sits between Contentful and Sanity in the market, more flexible than Contentful, but less code-centric than Sanity. Its Imgix integration handles image resizing, format conversion, and optimization automatically, removing a category of infrastructure work that other CMS platforms leave to the developer.
For some teams: Keystatic
Keystatic is the best Git-based CMS available for Astro and Next.js projects today. It threads the needle between developer control and editor usability better than any competitor in its category. The tradeoff is real though: content lives in your repo, so it inherits every limitation of a Git workflow, and editorial features like approvals, scheduling, and localization are either missing or immature. For small developer-led teams shipping content-light sites, it's a strong fit. For marketing teams that need editorial independence, it's not the right tool.
DatoCMS Verdict
4/5Best For
Marketing teams and scale-ups with media-heavy content where built-in image optimization and structured content are both priorities
Watch Out
Paid plans scale with records and locales, which can produce unexpected cost increases for large content libraries
ICP Fit Scores
Keystatic Verdict
3.5/5Best For
Developer-led teams building Astro or Next.js sites where content editors are comfortable working within a Git-adjacent workflow and the volume of content is manageable at file scale.
Watch Out
No native content scheduling, no approval workflows, no localization support, and all content is committed to your Git repo, which limits scale and editorial independence.
ICP Fit Scores
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Talk to usOur verdict
| Overview | ||
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2015 | 2023 |
| Pricing | ||
| Pricing Model | Free tier + Professional from $149/mo + Enterprise (custom) | Free open source, Keystatic Cloud free up to 3 users, Pro from $10/mo per team |
| Content Modeling | ||
Flexibility How flexible is the content modelling system? Can you define complex, nested, and relational content types without workarounds? | ●●●●●4/5 Nested blocks, references, and modular content fields cover most use cases. | ●●●●●4/5 Keystatic's TypeScript-based config gives you 30+ field types including blocks, arrays, conditionals, relationships, and rich text via Markdoc or MDX. Complex nested structures are achievable without workarounds. The main ceiling is that all content must map to files, so deeply relational data (many-to-many, cross-collection references) requires careful design. Within those constraints, the schema system is expressive and fully type-safe. |
Reusability How well does the platform support reusable content blocks? Blocks that map directly to design system components. | ●●●●●4/5 Modular content fields allow polymorphic block compositions. Block models can be reused across record types. | ●●●●●3/5 The blocks field type supports design-system-aligned component patterns, and singletons handle global content like nav and footer well. But there's no true content block library or global component reference system. Reuse happens by convention in code, not enforced by the CMS itself. |
Validation Does the platform enforce content validation rules natively? Required fields, character limits, regex, custom validators. | ●●●●●4/5 Required, min/max, and regex validation built in. Custom logic needs a plugin, more setup than some alternatives. | ●●●●●3/5 Required fields, text length constraints, and regex validation are supported via the TypeScript schema. Custom async validators are not natively available. The validation story is solid for basic to intermediate needs but won't satisfy teams with complex business rules who rely on the CMS to enforce them. |
| Editor Experience | ||
Onboarding How intuitive is the editing interface for a non-technical editor? Could a new editor publish their first piece of content within one hour, without help? | ●●●●●4/5 The DatoCMS UI is clean and approachable for editors with any CMS background. Structured entries need minimal training. | ●●●●●3/5 The admin UI is clean, opinionated, and generally intuitive. A non-technical editor can navigate collections, create entries, and publish within an hour if someone has configured the project correctly. The friction is the Git model itself: editors need to understand that saving triggers a GitHub commit, and that there's no staging area separate from the repo. |
Preview Does the platform offer live or visual preview of content? As it will appear on the frontend, without developer configuration. | ●●●●●4/5 Real-time previews via the Preview API. Immersive preview mode works alongside a live frontend, requires URL setup. | ●●●●●2/5 No built-in live preview. Keystatic doesn't provide an iframe preview or visual editing experience out of the box. You can wire up draft preview routes in Next.js or Astro yourself, but it requires developer setup and isn't seamless. Compared to TinaCMS or Sanity's presentation layer, this is a meaningful gap for content-heavy sites. |
Workflows How well does the platform handle the full editorial workflow? Drafts, scheduling, approval chains, role-based permissions. | ●●●●●4/5 Custom review states and scheduling built in. Workflow stages with approvals and notifications available on paid plans. | ●●●●●1/5 No approval workflows, no content scheduling, and no draft staging independent of Git branches. Drafts exist only as uncommitted changes in the browser's local storage. If your editorial process requires review-before-publish or scheduled publication, you're implementing it yourself through Git pull request conventions, which is a developer workflow, not an editor one. |
Assets How effective is the media and asset management? Upload, organisation, image transforms, search at scale. | ●●●●●5/5 Best-in-class SaaS assets, Imgix transforms, focal points, smart cropping, and video are all native features. | ●●●●●2/5 Local images are stored directly in the repository, which becomes a problem at scale as repo size grows. Keystatic Cloud's Pro plan adds Cloud Images, which handles upload, optimization, and serving via CDN. This resolves the core problem but puts it behind a paywall. No DAM-level organization, search, or tagging. Adequate for a blog, inadequate for a content-heavy marketing site. |
| Collaboration | ||
Real-time Does the platform support real-time collaboration? Simultaneous editing, presence indicators, inline comments. | ●●●●●5/5 Real-time collaboration is flagship, presence indicators, live field sync, and conflict-free simultaneous editing. | ●●●●●2/5 Multi-player editing is on the Keystatic Cloud Pro roadmap and listed as experimental as of 2025. In practice, simultaneous editing means Git merge conflicts. There are no presence indicators or inline comments. The collaboration model is pull request-based, which works fine for developer teams but is an obstacle for dedicated content teams. |
Permissions How granular and practical are user roles and permissions? By content type, locale, or specific fields, not just admin/editor. | ●●●●●4/5 Roles cover content type access, locale restrictions, and workflow gates. Field-level access on Professional plans. | ●●●●●2/5 Permissions are inherited from GitHub repository access levels (read, write, admin) plus basic Keystatic Cloud user roles. There are no collection-level or field-level permissions, no content ownership model, and no way to restrict a specific editor to a subset of content. Adequate for a 2-3 person team, limiting for anything larger. |
| Localisation | ||
Localisation Is multi-locale content management native? Field-level localisation, not page duplication or plugin workarounds. | ●●●●●4/5 Multi-locale built in with field-level variants and clean locale management. Any number of locales on paid plans. | ●●●●●1/5 Keystatic has no native localization support. Multi-locale content requires manual convention: separate collection paths per locale, file naming schemes, or a custom abstraction layer built on top. There is no locale switcher in the admin UI, no translation status tracking, and no locale-aware field configuration. |
Fallback Can editors manage locale fallback logic natively? e.g. show English if French translation is missing. | ●●●●●4/5 Fallback configured per locale in project settings. The API honors the chain automatically, a clean implementation. | ●●●●●1/5 Locale fallback logic does not exist in the CMS. Anything beyond a single-language site requires custom implementation at the framework layer. This is a hard blocker for any project with internationalization requirements. |
| Developer Experience | ||
API Docs How well-documented and developer-friendly is the delivery API? REST, GraphQL, typed SDKs, TypeScript support. | ●●●●●5/5 Best-in-class API docs, GraphQL API explorer, TypeScript type generation, and official JS SDK are all polished. | ●●●●●4/5 Documentation is well-organized, genuinely developer-friendly, and the Reader API is ergonomic. Full TypeScript support means your editor gets autocompletion for content queries. There's no delivery API in the traditional sense because content is read from the filesystem at build time, not fetched from a remote API. This is a strength for build-time performance and a limitation for real-time use cases. |
SDKs & Integrations How fast and friction-free is integration with modern frontend frameworks? Next.js, Astro, Nuxt, Remix, official examples or starter kits available. | ●●●●●4/5 Official starters for Next.js, Nuxt, and Astro. JS SDK handles typed queries but is slightly behind alternatives. | ●●●●●5/5 First-class Astro and Next.js integration is a genuine differentiator. The Astro integration is official, maintained by the Keystatic team, and the setup takes under 30 minutes. The CLI scaffolds full starter projects. Remix support exists. No Nuxt support. For the specific stack of Astro or Next.js, this is the smoothest integration experience in the Git-based CMS category. |
Management API Does the platform provide a Management API for programmatic content operations? Bulk import, AI pipelines, scripting. | ●●●●●4/5 The CMA covers record CRUD, schema management, and bulk ops. dato-migrate handles schema migrations across environments. | ●●●●●2/5 There is no management API for programmatic content operations from external systems. Content is authored through the admin UI or directly as files. You cannot push content via API from a pipeline or integrate with a third-party DAM or PIM. The GitHub API is technically available for scripting, but this is not a supported pattern. |
Environments Does the platform support environment branching or staging environments? For safe content and schema testing before promoting to production. | ●●●●●5/5 Fork production into a sandbox, test changes, then promote in one click, the cleanest env workflow in a SaaS CMS. | ●●●●●3/5 Environment branching maps to Git branches. In GitHub mode, you can point Keystatic at a specific branch per environment, which gives you a basic staging setup. There's no first-class environment concept in the admin UI, no environment promotion workflow, and no preview environment linking. It works but requires deliberate branch management conventions. |
| Performance | ||
CDN Delivery Does the platform deliver content via a global CDN? And how does this affect real-world API response times for your frontend? | ●●●●●5/5 Imgix CDN for all assets with global edge delivery. GraphQL API responses are fast, reliable, and globally distributed. | ●●●●●4/5 Content is read from the filesystem at build time, so there are no API calls at runtime and no CDN dependency for content delivery. This is a structural performance advantage for statically generated sites. Cloud Images on the Pro plan adds CDN-served optimized images. The absence of a runtime delivery API means no CDN latency to worry about and no rate limits to design around. |
Deployment How straightforward is hosting and deployment? Does the platform reduce or add infrastructure complexity? | ●●●●●5/5 Fully managed SaaS with no infrastructure ownership. Asset storage, CDN, and API are all handled by DatoCMS. | ●●●●●4/5 No separate CMS infrastructure to deploy or maintain. Keystatic runs as part of your Next.js or Astro app. Local mode requires zero configuration. GitHub mode requires setting up a Keystatic Cloud account or configuring a GitHub OAuth app, which is straightforward. No databases, no servers, no CMS-side deployments. This is meaningfully simpler than any hosted headless CMS. |
| Ecosystem & Longevity | ||
Plugin Ecosystem How mature and practically useful is the integration ecosystem? Not just quantity, are the integrations your clients actually need available and well-maintained? | ●●●●●3/5 Solid integrations with Shopify and major frameworks but a smaller marketplace than alternatives. | ●●●●●2/5 The integration ecosystem is limited but growing. Official support for Astro, Next.js, and Remix exists. No official plugins for analytics, commerce, or third-party integrations. Thinkmill's broader KeystoneJS ecosystem provides some adjacency but Keystatic is a distinct project. Compared to Sanity or Contentful, the plugin and integration surface is minimal. |
Community How active and meaningful is platform development? Community health, release cadence, direction of travel. | ●●●●●3/5 Smaller community relative to major players. Good docs and responsive support but fewer community tutorials. | ●●●●●3/5 Thinkmill is a credible backer with a strong open-source track record (KeystoneJS). The GitHub repository has ~2,000 stars and ~50 contributors as of early 2025, which is smaller than Decap CMS (16k stars) or TinaCMS (9k stars) but with substantially faster growth rate. Release cadence is active and the GitHub Discussions board is responsive. The risk is concentration: Thinkmill is a small agency and if priorities shift, the project could stall. |
Final verdict The verdict score is a weighted average of the criteria above. | 4/5 | 3.5/5 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Keystatic vs DatoCMS: which is better?
Based on Lucky Media's evaluation, DatoCMS scores higher overall (4/5 vs 3.5/5). DatoCMS is a polished headless CMS with a standout built-in image pipeline and a clean editorial interface. Real-time preview is first-class and collaborative editing is well-implemented, making it a strong choice for media-rich content teams. It sits between Contentful and Sanity in the market, more flexible than Contentful, but less code-centric than Sanity. Its Imgix integration handles image resizing, format conversion, and optimization automatically, removing a category of infrastructure work that other CMS platforms leave to the developer.
When should I choose Keystatic?
Keystatic is best for: Developer-led teams building Astro or Next.js sites where content editors are comfortable working within a Git-adjacent workflow and the volume of content is manageable at file scale.
When should I choose DatoCMS?
DatoCMS is best for: Marketing teams and scale-ups with media-heavy content where built-in image optimization and structured content are both priorities
Still not sure which to pick?
We help funded startups and enterprises make the right call for their specific team and stack.
Talk to us