Best Vercel Alternatives for Indie Hackers in 2026 (Honest Picks)
Vercel's pricing breaks the moment you ship real traffic. Here are 5 honest alternatives that won't bankrupt your indie SaaS.
Vercel raised prices again. The Pro plan is now $20 per seat plus a $20 monthly usage credit, and the moment you exceed that credit, bandwidth runs $0.15 per GB. A media-heavy launch can burn through the credit in a single afternoon.
The Hobby plan looks generous until you read the fine print. Commercial use is prohibited. Hit the 100 GB bandwidth cap and your deployment pauses with no grace period. For anything past a personal project, you are forced onto Pro.
I deploy SaaS products built in Laravel and Next.js. I have moved apps off Vercel twice. Here are the 5 alternatives I actually trust for indie hackers in 2026, with real pricing verified this week and the honest trade-offs of each.
Quick Verdict at a Glance
| Platform | Best For | Starting Price | Bandwidth Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Railway | Full-stack apps that need a database | $5/mo | $0.10/GB egress |
| Render | Predictable per-service pricing | $7/mo per service | $0.10/GB overage |
| Cloudflare Pages | Static sites and Jamstack | Free | Unlimited, free |
| Netlify | Marketing sites with forms | Free (300 credits) | 20 credits/GB |
| Coolify | Self-hosting on your own VPS | Free (open source) | Only your VPS bill |
Railway
Railway is the closest "it just works" alternative to Vercel for full-stack apps. You connect a GitHub repo, Railway auto-detects the framework, and you get a live URL in under two minutes. No Dockerfile needed.
The pricing is usage-based with a flat subscription floor. Hobby is $5 per month and includes $5 in usage credit. Pro is $20 per month and includes $20 in credit. Compute is billed at $0.000463 per vCPU-minute, RAM at $0.014 per GB-hour, and egress at $0.10 per GB. Idle services cost almost nothing because billing is metered per second.
The real win for indie hackers is the database story. Railway gives you one-click PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, or Redis, all managed, all billed against the same credit pool. On Vercel you have to bolt on Neon or Supabase as separate services with separate bills.
Who should not use Railway: if your app is high-bandwidth and always-on at scale, the usage model can get expensive fast. The $20 Pro credit covers maybe 150 GB of egress before overages hit. Static sites are cheaper on Cloudflare Pages.
Pricing verified: Hobby $5/month, Pro $20/month per seat, $0.10/GB egress (May 2026)
Render
Render is the platform for indie hackers who hate usage-based billing. You pick a plan, you pay that plan, and you know exactly what next month looks like.
Web services start at $7 per month for the Starter tier (512 MB RAM, 0.5 CPU). Standard is $25 per month (2 GB RAM, 1 CPU). PostgreSQL starts at $7 per month for a 256 MB instance. Bandwidth is 100 GB per month included, then $0.10 per GB. The free workspace tier includes 100 GB bandwidth and 500 build minutes, but free web services spin down after 15 minutes of inactivity, and free Postgres databases get hard-deleted after 30 days.
For a typical full-stack indie app with a web service, a background worker, and a Postgres database, the math lands around $25 to $50 per month on Render versus $50 to $200 on Vercel once you factor in the separate database. The per-service model is the catch. Once you have a web app, a worker, a cron job, and a staging environment, the line items add up.
Who should not use Render: if you want edge performance or aggressive auto-scaling, look elsewhere. Render scales but not as aggressively as Vercel or Cloudflare. The Professional workspace plan is also $19 per user per month, so a 5-person team starts at $95 in seat fees before any compute.
Pricing verified: Free tier with limits, Starter web service $7/month, Standard $25/month, Postgres from $7/month (May 2026)
Cloudflare Pages
If your app is static, a Jamstack site, or you can run your backend logic in Workers, Cloudflare Pages is impossible to beat on price. The free tier gives you unlimited bandwidth, 500 builds per month, and unlimited team seats. Yes, unlimited bandwidth. On the free plan.
Cloudflare can do this because they route everything through their existing CDN, and the marginal cost of serving a static asset on their network is functionally zero. Compare that to Vercel charging $0.15 per GB once you cross 1 TB, and the math is brutal.
For dynamic logic, Cloudflare Workers gives you 100,000 requests per day on the free tier. The Workers Paid plan is $5 per month and includes 10 million requests, with $0.30 per additional million. Pages Functions are billed as Workers. Add R2 (10 GB object storage free, $0.015/GB after, free egress) and D1 (their SQLite database) and you have a full backend.
Who should not use Cloudflare Pages: if your app needs long-running compute (Workers have CPU time limits) or a traditional Postgres database with complex queries, you will hit walls. The deployment experience is also rougher than Vercel for non-Next.js apps. SSR support exists via OpenNext but it is not as polished.
Pricing verified: Free with unlimited bandwidth, Workers Paid $5/month, R2 storage $0.015/GB after 10 GB free (May 2026)
Netlify
Netlify is the spiritual cousin of Vercel for indie hackers running Jamstack sites with forms, analytics, and lightweight serverless logic. The April 2026 pricing change made it dramatically more competitive: Pro is now $20 per month with unlimited team seats, not $20 per seat.
The free tier gives you 300 credits per month, which covers about 20 production deploys and some bandwidth. Personal is $9 per month for 1,000 credits. Pro is $20 per month for 3,000 credits. Credits are spent across bandwidth (20 credits per GB), compute (10 credits per GB-hour), web requests (2 credits per 10,000 requests), AI inference, and production deploys.
For a small marketing site with light traffic, Netlify is often free forever. For a real production app with a few thousand daily visitors, expect $20 to $50 a month. Form submissions are now free on all credit-based plans, which is a real cost saving for SaaS landing pages.
Who should not use Netlify: the credit system makes it harder to predict bills than Render's flat pricing. There are real horror stories on Hacker News about surprise bandwidth bills when traffic spiked unexpectedly, including reports of $700 to $100,000+ invoices. Set up spending alerts before anything else.
Pricing verified: Free (300 credits), Personal $9/month (1,000 credits), Pro $20/month with unlimited seats and 3,000 credits (May 2026)
Coolify
Coolify is the answer when the managed hosting bill stops making sense. It is open source (MIT license), self-hostable, and gives you Vercel-style deploys (push to GitHub, automatic SSL, preview environments) on any VPS you own. Cost: the price of the VPS. That is it.
The typical setup is Coolify running on a Hetzner CX22 server at €4.50 per month. You SSH in, run one install command, and you have a deployment UI that connects to GitHub and auto-detects your framework via Nixpacks. SSL is handled by Traefik and Let's Encrypt automatically. Databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, Redis, MongoDB) run as one-click services on the same VPS.
The cost gap is brutal. A team paying $600 a month on Vercel routinely lands at $40 to $60 a month all-in on Coolify plus Hetzner. Vercel charges $0.15 per GB of bandwidth overage. Hetzner sells the same bandwidth at roughly $0.001 per GB. That is a 150x markup you are paying for managed convenience.
Who should not use Coolify: if your time costs more than $50 an hour and you have not shipped past MVP, the managed platform is still the right call. Coolify gives you the deployment experience but you own the uptime, backups, and OS updates. Expect about 4 to 8 hours of initial setup time and 10 to 20 hours per year of ongoing maintenance.
Pricing verified: Free (open source), VPS cost typically €4.50 to $20/month on Hetzner (May 2026)
How Do You Choose the Right Vercel Alternative?
The decision usually comes down to two questions: what does your app actually need, and how much do you value your time?
flowchart LR
A[Where are you today?] --> B{App type?}
B -->|Static or Jamstack| C[Cloudflare Pages]
B -->|Marketing site + forms| D[Netlify]
B -->|Full-stack with database| E{Monthly bill?}
E -->|Under $50| F[Railway]
E -->|$50 to $200| G[Render]
E -->|Over $200| H[Coolify on Hetzner]
If you are pre-revenue and your traffic fits inside a free tier, Cloudflare Pages or Netlify are unbeatable. The bandwidth and credit allowances cover most launches comfortably.
If you have a real product with a database and background jobs, Railway is the lowest-friction path off Vercel. The usage-based pricing rewards small apps and the database story is the best in the category.
If your monthly hosting bill has crossed $100 and you have engineering time available, Coolify on Hetzner is the obvious endgame. The savings compound month after month, and the operational complexity has dropped to the point where the trade is genuinely worth it.
Worth noting: I cover the Railway vs Render vs Fly.io comparison in depth in our hosting deep-dive, which is the right read if you have already narrowed it down to those three.
Which Vercel Alternative Should You Pick?
For most indie hackers reading this, the right answer is one of three:
Railway if you are running a full-stack SaaS with a database and you want the lowest-friction migration off Vercel. $5 to $20 a month covers most early-stage apps.
Cloudflare Pages if your site is mostly static or you can move your backend logic to Workers. The unlimited bandwidth is the cheapest insurance against a viral launch you have ever bought.
Coolify on Hetzner if your hosting bill is already past $100 a month and the engineering time to manage a VPS is cheaper than the Vercel tax. About 4 to 8 hours of one-time setup saves you thousands per year.
The pattern I keep seeing is that indie hackers stay on Vercel too long. The convenience is real but the math turns ugly the moment a side project finds product-market fit. Pick the platform you can grow into, not just the one that is easiest to start on.
After you pick a host, the next thing to set up is monitoring so you know when something breaks. I covered the best uptime monitoring tools for indie hackers recently, which pairs well with any of these platforms.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Vercel still worth it for indie hackers in 2026?
Vercel is still the easiest way to ship a Next.js app, but the pricing math gets harder as you scale. The Hobby plan prohibits commercial use, and the Pro plan starts at $20 per seat with a $20 usage credit that covers roughly 133 GB of bandwidth overage. If your project is pre-revenue or stays under the credit, Vercel is fine. Once your bills cross $50 a month, almost any alternative on this list saves money.
What is the cheapest Vercel alternative for a Next.js app?
Cloudflare Pages is the cheapest for static Next.js sites because bandwidth is unlimited and free on every plan. For full-stack Next.js with API routes, Railway runs about $5 to $20 a month on the Hobby or Pro plan including the $5 or $20 usage credit. If you want the absolute cheapest, Coolify on a Hetzner CX22 VPS at €4.50 per month gives you preview deployments and SSL for the price of a coffee.
Can I move a Next.js app off Vercel without breaking SSR or ISR?
Yes, but the experience varies. Cloudflare Pages supports Next.js SSR via the OpenNext adapter and ISR works on most paid tiers. Railway and Render run Next.js in standalone mode without any special config. Netlify has native Next.js support including ISR. Coolify uses Nixpacks to auto-detect Next.js. The one feature that does not port cleanly is Vercel-specific Edge Middleware, which has different limits and APIs on other platforms.
Why is Vercel bandwidth so expensive compared to alternatives?
Vercel bills bandwidth at $0.15 per GB after the included 1 TB on Pro. Hetzner sells dedicated server bandwidth at roughly $0.001 per GB. That is a 150x markup. The reason is that you are paying for the edge network, image optimization, DDoS protection, and managed infrastructure bundled together. For an MVP that pricing is fair. For a media-heavy production app, it becomes the largest line item on the bill faster than anything else.
Should indie hackers self-host with Coolify instead of using a managed platform?
Self-hosting with Coolify makes sense once your managed hosting bill crosses $50 to $100 a month and you have shipped past your MVP. Below that, the time you spend on server updates, backups, and uptime monitoring is not worth the savings. Coolify itself is open source and free, so the only cost is the VPS, typically $5 to $20 a month. The trade-off is that you own the uptime. If your VPS goes down at 2 AM, your app goes down.
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