Why the Fastest-Growing eCommerce Brands Are Choosing Next.js Storefronts on Spree

Why the Fastest-Growing eCommerce Brands Are Choosing Next.js Storefronts on Spree

There is a reason brands like Maisonette deliver the kind of shopping experience that feels effortless. Pages load instantly, checkout is smooth, and every detail feels intentional. They run Next.js storefronts on Spree’s open-source eCommerce backend. Now, with a new ready-to-use storefront starter, any business can launch that same caliber of experience without the timeline or budget that used to require.

Key Takeaways

Who it’s for: Ecommerce brands and merchants building fast, scalable storefronts without SaaS limitations or platform fees.

What it delivers: A guide to Next.js storefronts on Spree’s open-source backend, with a ready-to-use starter for any business to launch in weeks instead of months.

Last verified: March 2026.

The same storefront technology Nike, Walmart, and Lego use: now available to your business

Next.js powers the storefronts of Nike, Walmart, Target, Lego, eBay, IKEA, H&M, Wayfair, CVS, Under Armour, Sephora, Samsung, Puma, LG, Carrefour, Marks & Spencer, and LUSH Cosmetics. These are not coincidences, these companies chose Next.js because it makes storefronts fast, and fast storefronts make more money.

When you pair Next.js with Spree’s open-source eCommerce API, you get a storefront that loads instantly, ranks higher on Google, and converts more visitors into buyers. Every second of load time directly impacts revenue. This is not a technical detail. It is a business decision.

Your storefront evolves as fast as your business does. New campaign pages, seasonal redesigns, A/B tests. Your team ships them without touching the commerce backend or risking a checkout outage. The storefront and the commerce engine move independently, so neither slows the other down.

One investment powers every channel. The Next.js storefront is just the beginning. The same Spree backend can also power a mobile app, a wholesale portal, a marketplace, or an AI shopping assistant inside ChatGPT. You build once, then expand wherever your customers are. Read more about why pairing an open-source eCommerce backend with Next.js delivers a future-proof platform.

A shopping experience your competitors cannot copy. SaaS platforms give everyone the same templates. With Next.js and Spree, your team has complete creative control. That is how brands like those in our Next.js showcase build storefronts that feel unmistakably theirs.

You get a complete store out of the box: then make it yours

The official Next.js Storefront Starter is not a demo. It is a fully working store, the kind of store your customers actually want to shop at.

Product pages, categories, search, cart, checkout, customer accounts, order history, saved addresses, multi-country support, mobile-first design, and built-in monitoring, all included from day one.

Your team connects it to Spree and has a running store in minutes. From there, they customize the look and feel, the user flows, and the checkout experience to match your brand. It is your code, your brand, your rules.

You can design your storefront yourself: no developers needed to start

Here is something that was not possible two years ago: a business leader can design a professional storefront without writing a single line of code.

v0 by Vercel is an AI tool that turns plain-language descriptions into ready-to-use storefront pages. You describe what you want: “a product page with large images, size selector, and customer reviews.” v0 produces a polished, working design that your team can drop straight into the Spree storefront starter.

Want to borrow ideas from a competitor? Paste a screenshot of their checkout flow and v0 creates your own version. Want to test three different homepage layouts? Describe each one and compare them in minutes.

This means you can prototype and iterate on your shopping experience before your developers write a single line of code. When you are happy with the direction, your team takes over and brings it to production. The AI-assisted development approach shortens the path from idea to live storefront. This works seamlessly because Spree is open-source and built for AI-assisted development.

Your team ships faster because the platform does not slow them down

This is the part your CTO or agency lead will care about most: the new Spree API v3 is designed so your development team spends their time on the shopping experience, not fighting the platform.

Projects that used to take months now take weeks. The API follows the same design principles as top-tier tech platforms, so developers who have built anything modern feel at home immediately. Security is built in, customer data and payment integrations through Stripe and Adyen are protected by default, not bolted on as an afterthought.

The bottom line for your business: faster time to market, lower development costs, and a platform your team actually wants to work on. For a deeper look, see developer tools for eCommerce engineering productivity.

Every business model, one platform: no re-platforming required

Most eCommerce platforms do one thing well and charge you for plugins when you need anything else. Spree handles the complex scenarios natively, they are part of the core API-first, open-source eCommerce platform, not third-party add-ons that break on the next update.

You are running five brands across three countries? Each one gets its own storefront, its own branding, its own catalog, managed from a single admin dashboard. Localized pricing, translated content, region-specific tax and shipping rules. All built in.

Your biggest B2B customer asks for wholesale pricing? You do not need a separate store. Turn on the B2B module and your wholesale buyers log in and see their negotiated prices. Their purchasing manager approves orders before they ship. The workflow just works.

You want to run percentage discounts, free shipping, buy-one-get-one, tiered pricing? Set it all up from the admin dashboard without touching code.

Not plugins. Not duct-taped add-ons. First-party capabilities maintained by the same team that builds everything else.

When you outgrow what any free platform can do

Some businesses need more. You want to launch a marketplace, run a franchise network, or manage a portfolio of brands on shared infrastructure. That is what Enterprise Edition for complex commerce scenarios is for.

Vendors show up with their products already synced. A seller connects their existing Shopify or WooCommerce store, and their products appear on your multi-vendor marketplace. Orders flow. Payments split automatically via Stripe Connect, vendors get paid. Your customers buy from five different sellers in one checkout with one payment. See how automated vendor onboarding works.

Hundreds of stores, one infrastructure bill. You are running a franchise, a SaaS for merchants, or a multi-brand enterprise. Each one gets their own storefront, their own dashboard, their own branding. You manage the whole operation from one place. From tightly managed franchise and reseller networks to fully independent operators, you control how much autonomy each tenant gets.

Enterprise-grade security. The same standards banks and healthcare companies require. A dedicated support team that knows your setup, with guaranteed response times and 24/7 monitoring.

Your success is backed by the team that builds the platform

Whether you are running a growing brand or managing commerce for a large organization, Enterprise support gives you direct access to the engineers who know the platform inside out.

That means a dedicated success manager, guaranteed response times, group chat and email support, long-term support releases, priority fixes, 24/7 monitoring, and professional services when you need them.

You are not buying software and hoping for the best. You are partnering with the team that builds it.

No platform fees. No revenue cuts. Your costs scale with infrastructure, not sales.

There is a reason brands like Goop, Blue Bottle Coffee, GoDaddy, Huckberry, Craftsman, Kenmore, and DieHard run on open-source eCommerce rather than SaaS. When your business needs a unique checkout flow, a custom pricing model, or a proprietary logistics integration, a SaaS platform puts you in a queue. With Spree and Next.js, every line of code is yours.

No GMV cuts. No transaction fees. No per-store charges. As your revenue grows, your platform costs stay predictable. The businesses that win in commerce are the ones that own their technology stack rather than renting it.

Already on Spree? Two easy paths forward.

If you already have a storefront running on Spree, you can lift and shift it to Spree 5 without rebuilding from scratch. Your existing store keeps working the entire time, customers never notice the upgrade happening behind the scenes. See also: how to migrate your backend to Spree 5 while keeping your current storefront.

If you are ready for a fresh shopping experience, the Next.js Storefront Starter gives you a fully working store out of the box, product pages, cart, checkout, accounts, and all. Your team just styles it to match your brand and you are live.

Get started for free or book a meeting to see how Spree 5 and Next.js can power your next storefront.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Nike use Next.js for its ecommerce storefront?

Yes. Nike is one of several enterprise brands that adopted Next.js for their digital commerce experiences. Other notable examples include Walmart, Target, and Lego. These companies chose Next.js for its server-side rendering performance, component-based architecture, and the ability to deploy updates independently of backend releases.

Why are enterprise brands choosing Next.js for ecommerce over traditional platforms?

Enterprise teams choose Next.js because it decouples the storefront from the commerce backend, allowing frontend and backend teams to ship independently. This headless architecture eliminates the frontend bottleneck that monolithic platforms create. Companies report faster page loads, higher conversion rates, and the freedom to customize every element of the shopping experience without platform constraints.

How does a Next.js ecommerce storefront compare to Shopify in performance?

Next.js storefronts with server-side rendering typically achieve sub-second Largest Contentful Paint scores, outperforming most Shopify themes on Core Web Vitals. The difference comes from rendering control: Next.js lets developers optimize exactly what loads and when. Shopify’s templating system handles this automatically but with less flexibility, which becomes a limitation at enterprise scale.

Can you build a Next.js ecommerce store without a large development team?

Yes. Open-source starter kits provide a complete storefront with product pages, cart, checkout, and account management pre-built. A team of 2 to 3 developers can customize and launch within 8 to 12 weeks. AI coding assistants have further reduced the effort required, making headless storefronts accessible to teams that previously would have needed 5 or more developers.

What does it cost to run a Next.js ecommerce storefront compared to a SaaS platform?

Infrastructure costs for a Next.js storefront on Vercel or similar hosting typically run $50 to $500 per month depending on traffic volume. The commerce backend, if open source, adds only hosting costs with zero platform fees or revenue-based charges. SaaS platforms like Shopify Plus start at $2,300 per month plus transaction fees, making the total cost of ownership significantly higher at scale.

How do you add B2B or marketplace features to a Next.js ecommerce storefront?

Choose a backend that supports B2B and marketplace natively rather than through plugins. A platform with built-in wholesale pricing, customer-specific catalogs, and multi-vendor payment splits lets your Next.js frontend access these features through the same API used for standard retail. This avoids the complexity of integrating multiple third-party services into your storefront layer.

What ecommerce backend works with Next.js for enterprise stores?

Any commerce platform with a well-documented REST or GraphQL API can serve as a Next.js backend. Open-source platforms like Spree Commerce provide dedicated Next.js starters with pre-built SDK integration. The key evaluation criteria are API completeness (products, orders, payments, customers, inventory), multi-store support, and whether the platform charges fees on revenue.

Let's use Spree to build exactly what your business needs

Let's use Spree to build exactly what your business needs

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