Lucky Media Comparison
Strapi vs Hygraph
An honest, side-by-side comparison from a team that has shipped both in production.
Lucky Media Expert Recommendation
For most teams: Strapi
Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS, offering a self-hosted REST and GraphQL API with a visual content type builder and a customizable admin panel. As an open-source tool, there are no per-seat fees and no vendor lock-in, teams own the infrastructure and can modify the source code if needed. It supports custom fields, custom API routes, lifecycle hooks, and plugin extensions that make it adaptable to complex requirements. The tradeoff is that hosting, database management, upgrades, and performance tuning all fall on your team. Strapi Cloud exists for managed hosting.
For some teams: Hygraph
Hygraph is a niche but powerful choice for enterprise teams that need to federate content from multiple sources (databases, third-party APIs, and CMS entries) into a single unified GraphQL layer. Its Content Federation capability is the differentiator: rather than migrating data into a central CMS, teams can query Hygraph and receive a unified response assembled from external sources at runtime. This makes it particularly effective for multi-brand or multi-region content operations where data lives in legacy systems that cannot be easily migrated. For most projects that do not require federation, Hygraph's advantages over Sanity or Contentful are less pronounced.
Strapi Verdict
3.6/5Best For
Developer teams that want a self-hosted, open-source CMS with a REST/GraphQL API and no per-seat pricing
Watch Out
Performance can degrade at scale without careful query optimization; self-hosting requires infrastructure investment
ICP Fit Scores
Hygraph Verdict
3.5/5Best For
Enterprise teams running multi-brand or multi-region content operations that need federated content queries across heterogeneous data sources
Watch Out
Overkill for most projects; Community tier is limited; full value only realized when Content Federation is actually needed
ICP Fit Scores
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Talk to usOur verdict
| Overview | ||
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2015 | 2017 |
| Tagline | The leading open-source headless CMS | The federated content graph for enterprise teams |
| Pricing | ||
| Pricing Model | Community free (open source, self-hosted) + Growth from $45/mo + Enterprise (custom) | Community free + Scale from $199/mo + Enterprise (custom) |
| Content Modeling | ||
Flexibility How flexible is the content modelling system? Can you define complex, nested, and relational content types without workarounds? | ●●●●●5/5 Full code-level control, types, custom fields, relations, and dynamic zones in TypeScript with no GUI limitations. | ●●●●●5/5 GraphQL-native schema with union types and polymorphic relations. Content Federation adds external data sources. |
Reusability How well does the platform support reusable content blocks? Blocks that map directly to design system components. | ●●●●●4/5 Components are reusable blocks. Dynamic zones allow polymorphic content. Less visual than some alternatives. | ●●●●●4/5 Component models embed across content types. Schema-first reuse is straightforward for GraphQL-experienced developers. |
Validation Does the platform enforce content validation rules natively? Required fields, character limits, regex, custom validators. | ●●●●●4/5 Built-in validators for required, min/max, regex, and unique. Custom validators via hooks, powerful but developer-only. | ●●●●●3/5 Basic required, unique, and regex validators. Advanced custom validation is limited compared to alternatives. |
| 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? | ●●●●●3/5 Admin panel is functional but requires self-hosting setup. Less polished than SaaS alternatives out of the box. | ●●●●●3/5 The editor is functional but complex. Editors need to understand GraphQL-style relationships before working efficiently. |
Preview Does the platform offer live or visual preview of content? As it will appear on the frontend, without developer configuration. | ●●●●●3/5 Draft and Publish built in since v5. Live preview needs frontend integration, no native visual preview panel. | ●●●●●3/5 Preview via configurable URLs. No live preview panel, editors see changes after saving. Developer setup required. |
Workflows How well does the platform handle the full editorial workflow? Drafts, scheduling, approval chains, role-based permissions. | ●●●●●3/5 Draft and publish states in v5. Scheduling and review workflows on Enterprise. Open source covers basic publish flow. | ●●●●●4/5 Custom content stages are configurable. Approval workflows with notifications are available on paid plans. |
Assets How effective is the media and asset management? Upload, organisation, image transforms, search at scale. | ●●●●●3/5 Media Library handles uploads and metadata. No native CDN or transforms, use the Cloudinary plugin for optimization. | ●●●●●3/5 Handles uploads and basic transforms via the built-in API. Less capable than alternatives. |
| Collaboration | ||
Real-time Does the platform support real-time collaboration? Simultaneous editing, presence indicators, inline comments. | ●●●●●1/5 No real-time collaboration. Multiple editors can use the panel but there are no presence indicators or live sync. | ●●●●●3/5 Presence indicators show concurrent editors. Live sync available but less polished. |
Permissions How granular and practical are user roles and permissions? By content type, locale, or specific fields, not just admin/editor. | ●●●●●5/5 Strapi's RBAC is the most granular available, field, action-level, and content type permissions all configurable. | ●●●●●5/5 The most granular here, field, locale, content stage, and model-level access designed for complex enterprise orgs. |
| Localisation | ||
Localisation Is multi-locale content management native? Field-level localisation, not page duplication or plugin workarounds. | ●●●●●4/5 The official i18n plugin adds field-level localization to any content type. Part of the official Strapi distribution. | ●●●●●5/5 Multi-locale is first-class with field-level variants, locale-specific publishing, and multi-region API delivery. |
Fallback Can editors manage locale fallback logic natively? e.g. show English if French translation is missing. | ●●●●●3/5 Fallback via API response config, the API returns a fallback locale for missing translations with parameter setup. | ●●●●●5/5 Native fallback configured in project settings with API-level enforcement. GraphQL returns fallback values automatically. |
| Developer Experience | ||
API Docs How well-documented and developer-friendly is the delivery API? REST, GraphQL, typed SDKs, TypeScript support. | ●●●●●4/5 Auto-generated REST and GraphQL APIs documented in the admin panel. TypeScript support improved significantly. | ●●●●●5/5 Excellent GraphQL docs with a live playground, schema introspection, and generated TypeScript types. |
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 Next.js and Astro examples in the docs. REST and GraphQL work with any client, no managed SDK. | ●●●●●4/5 Good framework examples. GraphQL-first means any client works easily, less framework tooling than alternatives. |
Management API Does the platform provide a Management API for programmatic content operations? Bulk import, AI pipelines, scripting. | ●●●●●5/5 Schemas, content, roles, and plugins are all code-first. CLI supports environment setup and plugin scaffolding. | ●●●●●5/5 Full schema management via GraphQL mutations, types, relations, and fields all programmatically creatable. |
Environments Does the platform support environment branching or staging environments? For safe content and schema testing before promoting to production. | ●●●●●3/5 v5 added multi-environment support with content isolation between dev, staging, and production. Still developer-managed. | ●●●●●4/5 Branch schema and content for testing, then promote. Less polished than DatoCMS's one-click sandbox workflow. |
| 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? | ●●●●●2/5 Self-hosted with no CDN. Delivery speed depends on your hosting and caching setup. Strapi Cloud adds CDN. | ●●●●●4/5 Global CDN with multi-region data residency on Enterprise. API performance is strong globally, especially for GraphQL. |
Deployment How straightforward is hosting and deployment? Does the platform reduce or add infrastructure complexity? | ●●●●●2/5 Self-hosting requires Node.js and a managed database. Strapi Cloud simplifies ops but adds cost over the free tier. | ●●●●●5/5 Fully managed SaaS with zero infrastructure to configure or maintain. |
| 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? | ●●●●●4/5 Marketplace covers Cloudinary, Algolia, and Stripe. Open-source means many plugins but quality is inconsistent. | ●●●●●3/5 Focused on e-commerce, frameworks, and enterprise tools. |
Community How active and meaningful is platform development? Community health, release cadence, direction of travel. | ●●●●●4/5 One of the most active open-source CMS communities on GitHub. Discord is large and tutorials are widely available. | ●●●●●3/5 Enterprise-niche community. Active Discord with responsive support but fewer tutorials and third-party resources. |
Final verdict The verdict score is a weighted average of the criteria above. | 3.6/5 | 3.5/5 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Strapi vs Hygraph: which is better?
Based on Lucky Media's evaluation, Strapi scores higher overall (3.6/5 vs 3.5/5). Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS, offering a self-hosted REST and GraphQL API with a visual content type builder and a customizable admin panel. As an open-source tool, there are no per-seat fees and no vendor lock-in, teams own the infrastructure and can modify the source code if needed. It supports custom fields, custom API routes, lifecycle hooks, and plugin extensions that make it adaptable to complex requirements. The tradeoff is that hosting, database management, upgrades, and performance tuning all fall on your team. Strapi Cloud exists for managed hosting.
When should I choose Strapi?
Strapi is best for: Developer teams that want a self-hosted, open-source CMS with a REST/GraphQL API and no per-seat pricing
When should I choose Hygraph?
Hygraph is best for: Enterprise teams running multi-brand or multi-region content operations that need federated content queries across heterogeneous data sources
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