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Next.js to Webflow Migration: 2026 Guide for Webflow Agencies

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Himanshu Sahu

12 mins read

March 2, 2026

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Quick Summary
What you need to know about Next.js to Webflow migration
  • Most B2B SaaS marketing sites built on Next.js create developer dependency for every content change, costing marketing teams weeks of campaign time per quarter.
  • Next.js is the right tool for product applications. Webflow is the right tool for marketing sites. Mixing them up is the root cause of the bottleneck.
  • A clean Next.js to Webflow migration covers URL mapping, redirect planning, CMS architecture, integration reconnection, and SEO preservation, done in a defined sequence.
  • Migrating from a JavaScript-rendered Next.js site to Webflow's server-rendered HTML can improve your SEO coverage, not just maintain it.
  • Choosing the right Webflow agency matters. Look for a certified Webflow Enterprise Partner with B2B SaaS experience and a documented SEO preservation process.

Your developers built a great product on React. Then someone said, "Let's just build the marketing site in Next.js too, since the team already knows it." It made sense at the time. Now your marketing team is filing Jira tickets to change a headline.

This is the Next.js marketing site trap. And it is costing B2B SaaS companies far more than they realise.

If your marketing team cannot update a CTA, launch a landing page, or publish a blog post without pulling an engineer off the product roadmap, you already know the problem. What you might not know yet is how straightforward a Next.js to Webflow migration can be when done right.

In this guide, we walk through why B2B companies end up here, what it costs them, and how to run a clean, SEO-safe migration from Next.js to Webflow that gives your marketing team full ownership of the site.

Suggested read: How to choose the right Webflow Enterprise Partner

We have run this process for clients across the US, UK, and Europe. This guide is built on what actually works.

Suggested read: Drupal to Webflow Migration in 2026

Why B2B Companies Built Their Marketing Sites on Next.js

It was a completely reasonable call in the early days.

Your engineering team was already deep in React. The CTO wanted consistency across the stack. Your first "website" was more of a product launch page than a real marketing site. Speed to ship mattered more than anything else.

Next.js gave the team full control: custom components, server-side rendering, fast load times when optimised well, and deep flexibility for anyone who could write code.

For a small founding team where an engineer would update the site occasionally, this worked fine.

The problem is that this setup does not scale with the marketing function.

What changes as the company grows:

As you move from seed to Series A to Series B, the marketing team grows. You hire a Head of Marketing, a content writer, a demand gen lead. They need to launch campaigns. They need to test landing pages. They need to publish case studies, update pricing, and iterate on the homepage based on positioning changes.

None of them can touch the Next.js site without an engineer.

This is not a Next.js problem exactly. It is a wrong tool for the job problem. Next.js is built for web applications. Your marketing site is a conversion tool. These are very different things.

Suggested read: Webflow vs Adobe Experience Manager: CMS Comparison

The Real Cost of Running a Marketing Site on Next.js

Let's be honest about what this actually costs you.

Developer dependency for every single change

Every content update, whether it is a headline, a case study, a new pricing tier, or a button colour, requires a developer to write code, push to a branch, get it reviewed, and deploy. On a good day, this takes a few hours. On a busy sprint, it takes a week or more.

Your marketing team does not have a week. Campaign windows close. Competitor moves happen fast. Messaging needs to shift after a single sales call.

The opportunity cost here is enormous. Every hour an engineer spends updating the marketing site is an hour not spent on the product.

Headless CMS bolt-ons adding complexity and cost

Most Next.js marketing sites end up bolting on a headless CMS like Contentful, Sanity, or Strapi to give non-technical team members some editing ability. Now you are managing two systems, paying for two platforms, and still needing a developer every time you want to add a new field or change a layout.

This is a workaround, not a solution.

No visual editing for marketers

Marketing teams work visually. They think in layouts, sections, and page flow. When you are editing a Contentful field and hoping the frontend renders it correctly, you are not really in control of the website. You are filling in forms and trusting that a developer's template does the rest.

Webflow's visual editor is built for exactly this. What you see is what gets published.

Slow time to market for campaigns

A landing page that should take a day to build takes a sprint cycle. By the time the page is live, the campaign window has passed or the messaging has already shifted. This is one of the most common frustrations we hear from marketing leaders who come to us from Next.js setups.

Maintenance burden on engineering

Next.js sites require ongoing care: dependency updates, security patches, Node.js version upgrades, and Vercel or Netlify configuration changes. None of this is exciting work. All of it pulls engineering focus from the product.

At Flowtrix, we see this constantly with Series A and Series B companies. The engineering team built the site, got pulled back to the product, and now the site is running on an outdated version of Next.js that nobody wants to touch.

$5K+
Estimated monthly cost of engineering time spent maintaining and updating a marketing site on Next.js at a Series A or Series B B2B SaaS company. That is time not spent on product.

Next.js vs Webflow for B2B Marketing Websites

This comparison is specifically about marketing websites, not web applications. Next.js is a strong choice for building complex product interfaces and apps. But for a marketing site, the calculus is very different.

FactorNext.jsWebflowWho can edit contentDevelopers onlyMarketing teamTime to publish a new pageDays to a weekHoursDeveloper needed for changesYes, almost alwaysNoBuilt-in CMSNo, requires bolt-onYesVisual editorNoYesBuilt-in SEO toolsLimitedStrongHosting and maintenanceManual, Vercel/NetlifyManaged by WebflowDesign flexibility for marketersLow without devHighPage speed out of the boxVariableStrong, global CDNBest suited forWeb apps, product UIsMarketing sites, CMS-driven content

The headline difference is control. Webflow gives your marketing team full ownership of the site. Next.js does not.

This is not about which technology is better in a technical sense. It is about which platform is right for the job your marketing site needs to do.

Factor (for marketing websites) Next.js Webflow
Who can edit content Developers only Marketing team
Time to publish a new page Days to a week Hours
Developer needed for changes Almost always No
Built-in CMS No, bolt-on required Yes
Visual editor for marketers No Yes
Built-in SEO tools Limited, manual setup Strong, built-in
Hosting and maintenance Manual, Vercel/Netlify Fully managed
Design flexibility for marketers Low without dev High
Page speed out of the box Variable, needs tuning Strong, global CDN
Best suited for Web apps, product UIs Marketing sites, CMS content

This comparison is specifically for marketing websites, not web applications. Next.js remains an excellent choice for building complex product interfaces and dashboards.

Suggested read: Figma to Webflow 2026 Handoff Guide for B2B SaaS Teams

When to Migrate to Webflow, and When to Keep Next.js

We will be honest here. Not every Next.js site should be migrated.

Strong signals that a Webflow migration makes sense:

  • Your marketing team submits Jira tickets to change page content
  • You bolted on Contentful, Sanity, or Strapi and it is adding cost and complexity
  • Engineering spends 10 or more hours per week on marketing site updates
  • You cannot launch a landing page without a sprint cycle
  • Your site is running on outdated Next.js dependencies nobody wants to update
  • You have hired marketing team members who cannot touch the site

When to keep Next.js:

  • Your marketing site has custom user authentication baked in
  • Pages pull real-time data directly from your product API
  • You have interactive tools like ROI calculators that require backend logic
  • Your frontend team is actively and regularly iterating on the site as a product
  • Your marketing and engineering functions are deeply intertwined by design

For the vast majority of B2B SaaS marketing sites, including homepage, product pages, pricing, case studies, blog, and contact, Webflow is the stronger platform. These are content-driven, conversion-focused pages. They do not need a React framework.

Migrate to Webflow
Strong signals it is time to move
  • Your marketing team submits Jira tickets to change page content or headlines
  • You bolted on Contentful, Sanity, or Strapi and it adds cost and confusion
  • Engineering spends 10 or more hours per week on marketing site updates
  • You cannot launch a landing page without waiting for a sprint cycle
  • Your site is running on outdated Next.js dependencies nobody wants to touch
  • Marketing team members cannot edit or manage the site themselves
Keep Next.js
Scenarios where staying makes sense
  • Your marketing site has custom user authentication built in
  • Pages pull real-time data directly from your product API
  • You have interactive tools like ROI calculators that require backend logic
  • Your frontend team actively owns and iterates on the site as a product
  • Marketing and engineering are deeply integrated by deliberate design

Step-by-Step: How to Run a Next.js to Webflow Migration

A clean Webflow migration takes planning. Here is how we approach it at Flowtrix, based on 120+ global projects.

Step 1: Audit and discovery

Before touching anything, we audit the existing site. We document every page, every CMS field, every third-party integration, and every URL. We also audit current SEO performance: which pages are ranking, which have backlinks, and what the crawl structure looks like.

This takes a week but prevents problems that would take weeks to fix later.

Step 2: Content and component inventory

We list every page type and every reusable component on the site. For Next.js sites, this means mapping React components to their Webflow equivalents. We also flag any functionality that does not exist natively in Webflow so we can plan custom code solutions early.

Step 3: URL mapping and redirect planning

This is one of the most critical steps for SEO preservation. Every URL on the old site gets mapped to its new equivalent. We build the full redirect file before a single line of Webflow code is written.

Missing this step is the most common reason migrations hurt SEO.

Flowtrix Migration Specialists

Ready to free your marketing team from Next.js?

Flowtrix handles the full migration, from URL mapping and CMS architecture to SEO preservation and post-launch training, so your team owns the site from day one.

Step 4: Design rebuild in Webflow

We build the site in Webflow from the design up. If a full redesign is in scope, this is where the new UX is built. If it is a like-for-like migration, we rebuild components faithfully while improving performance and Webflow CMS compatibility.

We use a component-driven approach so the marketing team can build new pages independently after launch.

Step 5: CMS architecture setup

For blogs, case studies, resource libraries, and testimonials, we set up Webflow CMS collections. Content editors can add a new case study in minutes. No developer required.

We also migrate existing content from any headless CMS like Contentful or Sanity.

Step 6: Integration migration

HubSpot forms, Google Analytics, Intercom, LinkedIn Insight Tag, and your consent tool all need reconnecting and testing. We use a QA checklist to verify every integration fires correctly before launch.

Step 7: SEO preservation

Meta titles, descriptions, canonical tags, schema markup, robots.txt, and sitemap all need transferring and verifying. We cover this in detail in the next section.

Step 8: QA and launch

We run a full QA pass across every page, form, redirect, and integration. Then we do a staged launch with DNS cutover monitoring.

Step 9: Post-launch monitoring

We monitor rankings, crawl errors, and Core Web Vitals for the first 30 days after launch. If anything drops, we catch it fast.

Next.js to Webflow Migration Checklist
Audit all existing pages, URLs, and CMS fields
Pre-migration SEO audit: rankings, backlinks, crawl health
Map React components to Webflow equivalents
Build full URL redirect map before any development
Rebuild site in Webflow with component-driven approach
Set up Webflow CMS collections for blog, case studies, resources
Migrate content from headless CMS (Contentful, Sanity, Strapi)
Reconnect and test all integrations (HubSpot, analytics, chat)
Full QA pass on every page, form, redirect, and script
Staged launch with DNS cutover monitoring

Suggested read: 12 Effective Social Proof Strategies for B2B SaaS Websites

How to Preserve SEO During a Next.js Migration

SEO preservation is the number one concern we hear from marketing leaders before a CMS migration. It should be. A poorly executed migration can wipe out years of ranking progress.

Here is what a proper SEO-safe migration looks like.

301 redirects for every changed URL

If a URL changes at all during the migration, it needs a 301 redirect pointing to the new URL. No exceptions. Even URLs that seem unimportant may have backlinks or PageRank flowing through them.

We build the redirect map in advance and load it into Webflow's redirect manager or a custom code solution for larger redirect sets.

Meta tag transfer

Every page needs its meta title and description transferred. Not copied and pasted lazily. Reviewed and, where needed, improved.

Schema markup

Schema markup is often missing or broken on Next.js sites because it requires custom development work to implement correctly. Webflow makes it easier to implement and maintain. We set up structured data for organisation, service, FAQ, and breadcrumb schemas as part of every migration.

Suggested read: Schema Markup for Webflow Without Code 2026

JavaScript rendering and indexability

One underappreciated benefit of migrating from a Next.js site to Webflow is that many Next.js pages are client-side rendered and may not have been consistently indexed by Google. Webflow pages are server-rendered HTML, which Google can crawl and index efficiently and reliably.

This means a migration done well can actively improve your SEO baseline, not just maintain it.

Sitemap submission

After launch, submit the new Webflow sitemap to Google Search Console. Monitor the index coverage report closely for the first two weeks. Resolve any crawl errors before they compound.

SEO Preservation Checklist for Next.js to Webflow Migration
301 redirects mapped and loaded for every changed URL
Meta titles and descriptions reviewed and transferred
Canonical tags set correctly on all pages
Schema markup implemented for org, service, FAQ, and breadcrumbs
robots.txt transferred and verified
New Webflow sitemap submitted to Google Search Console
JavaScript-rendered pages audited for prior indexability issues
Rankings and crawl errors monitored for 30 days post-launch
Note on JavaScript rendering: Many Next.js sites use client-side rendering, meaning some pages may not have been indexed correctly by Google. Migrating to Webflow's server-rendered HTML can improve your indexed page count, not just preserve it.

Common Mistakes to Avoid in a Next.js to Webflow Migration

We have seen every variation of this migration go wrong. Here are the mistakes we see most often.

Skipping the pre-migration SEO audit. If you do not know which pages are ranking and why before you start, you cannot protect them during the migration. Always audit first.

Moving too fast on URL structure changes. Changing URL slugs during a migration without a complete redirect map is a guaranteed way to lose rankings. Plan every redirect before you launch.

Not testing integrations before launch. HubSpot forms, analytics scripts, and tracking pixels need to be verified on the new site in a staging environment. Never test integrations live.

Leaving the headless CMS running after migration. Some teams migrate to Webflow but keep Contentful or Sanity running for the blog. Now you have two CMS platforms, double the cost, and twice the confusion. Consolidate fully.

Not training the marketing team on Webflow after launch. The entire point of this migration is to give your marketing team ownership of the site. If they are not trained on Webflow's editor, the site will still be developer-dependent.

Migrating without a design review. A Next.js to Webflow migration is the perfect time to clean up outdated design, improve page structure, and fix conversion issues. Teams that do a like-for-like migration without any design input often end up with the same conversion problems on a new platform.

How to Choose the Right Webflow Agency for a Next.js Migration

A Webflow agency that only does template builds is not the right fit for a Next.js migration. This is a technical project with SEO, design, and CMS complexity involved. You need a partner who has done this before.

What to look for:

  • Certified Webflow Enterprise Partner status, not just a Webflow Certified Expert
  • Demonstrated experience migrating JavaScript framework sites, not just WordPress or HubSpot
  • B2B SaaS specialisation. They need to understand your buyer journey, content types, and conversion goals
  • Clear understanding of the difference between a marketing site and a web application
  • SEO preservation methodology, not just "we do SEO"
  • Post-launch training so your marketing team can actually own the site
  • CRO and conversion strategy built into the migration, not just a development-only scope

Ask to see examples of Next.js migrations they have completed. Ask specifically how they handle SEO preservation. Ask what happens to your team's Webflow training after launch.

What to Look for in a Webflow Agency for a Next.js Migration
Certified Webflow Enterprise Partner status
Experience migrating JavaScript framework sites, not just WordPress
B2B SaaS specialisation and understanding of your buyer journey
Understands the difference between a marketing site and a web application
A documented SEO preservation methodology, not just a vague promise
Post-launch training plan so your marketing team gains real ownership
CRO and conversion strategy included in scope, not just development
Verifiable client examples in B2B SaaS, AI, or cybersecurity

Suggested read: Top 10 Webflow Agencies in Australia

How Flowtrix Handles Next.js to Webflow Migrations

At Flowtrix, we are a certified Webflow Enterprise Partner nominated for Webflow Partner of the Year 2025. We have completed 120+ global projects for B2B SaaS, AI, and cybersecurity companies, many involving migrations from developer-dependent setups.

Our clients include Databahn, Akirolabs, Fuxam, Wayground, and Monk-e. These companies needed more than a new design. They needed a site their marketing team could own and iterate on without pulling engineers off the product roadmap.

When we run a Next.js migration, we do not just move the site to a new platform. We rebuild it as a conversion-focused, marketing-owned website with the right CMS architecture, SEO foundations, and component system from day one.

Our Webflow migration services cover everything from the initial audit through to post-launch monitoring and full team training. We have a defined process, clear timelines, and a strong track record of doing this without losing rankings.

If your marketing team is stuck waiting on developers, or your engineering team is losing valuable product hours to marketing site updates, it is time to talk.

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