fitgap

Thymeleaf

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
Take the quiz to check if Thymeleaf and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Pricing from
Completely free
Free Trial unavailable
Free version
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
-

What is Thymeleaf

Thymeleaf is a Java template engine used to render server-side HTML (and other text formats) in web applications. It is commonly used with Spring-based applications to generate views using natural templates that can be opened in a browser as static prototypes. Developers use it to bind model data to templates, apply conditional logic and iteration, and compose pages with reusable fragments. It supports multiple template modes (e.g., HTML, XML, TEXT, JAVASCRIPT, CSS) and integrates with common Java web stacks.

pros

Natural HTML templating

Templates are valid HTML files that can be viewed directly in a browser, which helps designers and developers collaborate on markup. The attribute-based syntax reduces the need for heavy server-side tags and keeps templates close to standard HTML. This approach can simplify prototyping and incremental UI changes in server-rendered applications.

Strong Spring ecosystem fit

Thymeleaf has well-known integration patterns with Spring MVC and Spring Boot, including view resolution and form binding. It provides dialects that align with common Spring use cases (e.g., security-aware rendering and form handling). For teams building traditional server-rendered Java web apps, this reduces glue code compared with assembling a templating stack from lower-level components.

Reusable fragments and layouts

The engine supports template composition through fragments, enabling shared headers, footers, and layout structures. This helps standardize UI across pages and reduces duplication in multi-page applications. It also supports conditional rendering and iteration in templates, covering typical CRUD and dashboard scenarios.

cons

Not a front-end framework

Thymeleaf focuses on server-side rendering and does not provide client-side state management, routing, or component reactivity. Applications that require highly interactive, SPA-like behavior often need additional client-side tooling. Teams may end up maintaining both server templates and significant JavaScript code for richer UX.

Performance tuning can be needed

Template rendering adds server-side CPU overhead, especially for complex pages or high-traffic workloads. Achieving good throughput may require caching strategies, careful fragment usage, and avoiding expensive expressions. In some architectures, precompiled or alternative rendering approaches can be simpler to optimize.

Dialect and expression complexity

Advanced use often relies on dialects, expression language features, and utility objects that can make templates harder to read and review. Debugging rendering issues may require understanding both template logic and controller/model construction. Large template codebases can accumulate logic in views that is difficult to test compared with pure Java code.

Plan & Pricing

Plan Price Key features & notes
Open-source Free Distributed under the Apache License 2.0; binaries and source available for download from the official site; maintained by the Thymeleaf community.

Seller details

Thymeleaf Team
Spain
2011
Open Source
https://www.thymeleaf.org/
https://x.com/thymeleaf

Tools by Thymeleaf Team

Thymeleaf

Best Thymeleaf alternatives

Retool
Jmix
GraalVM
React Native
See all alternatives

Popular categories

All categories