Complete guide to migrating your GraphCMS website to Jekyll. Leave GraphCMS's requires graphql knowledge behind and get native github pages integration. Free migration tool included.
You can migrate from GraphCMS to Jekyll for free using LeaveWP. Enter your site URL, choose Jekyll as the destination, and download your content — posts, pages, and media — in minutes. No API keys, passwords, or CLI tools required. Difficulty: Medium. Estimated time: 20-40 minutes.
GraphQL-native headless CMS (now Hygraph). Teams building GraphQL-first applications with federated data needs, but these limitations push teams toward modern alternatives.
Requires GraphQL knowledge — no REST API option
This is the most common reason teams migrate away from GraphCMS. Jekyll eliminates this issue entirely.
Free tier is restricted — paid plans start at $199/month
With Jekyll, native github pages integration — deploy by pushing to a repo.
Rebranded to Hygraph which caused community confusion
Modern architectures like Jekyll are designed to avoid this from the ground up.
Smaller ecosystem than Contentful or Strapi
After migrating, you'll no longer need to worry about this — Jekyll takes a fundamentally different approach.
Ruby-based SSG that powers GitHub Pages. Built with Ruby (Liquid templates), it's developer blogs hosted on github pages with minimal setup.
Native GitHub Pages integration — deploy by pushing to a repo
Mature and battle-tested for blogs and documentation
Large library of themes and plugins
Simple mental model — content in Markdown, layouts in Liquid
Jekyll is open-source and free to use. You own your code and data with no vendor lock-in. Deploy to any host that supports Ruby, or use managed platforms like Vercel and Netlify for zero-config deployments.
Side-by-side comparison based on real platform characteristics
| Metric | GraphCMS | Jekyll |
|---|---|---|
| Ease of Use | ⭐⭐⭐ 3/5 | ⭐⭐⭐ 3/5 |
| Performance | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4/5 | ⭐⭐⭐ 3/5 |
| Flexibility | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4/5 | ⭐⭐⭐ 3/5 |
| Cost | ⭐⭐ 2/5 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5/5 |
| Scalability | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4/5 | ⭐⭐ 2/5 |
| Ecosystem | ⭐⭐ 2/5 | ⭐⭐⭐ 3/5 |
| Language | API-based (GraphQL-first) | Ruby (Liquid templates) |
| Pricing | Free / $199+/month | Free (open-source) |
| Open Source | No | Yes |
Ratings are based on publicly available data, documentation, and community consensus as of 2026. Individual experience may vary.
A detailed breakdown of how your GraphCMS content maps to Jekyll
What may need manual attention
Custom server-side logic, third-party integrations, and platform-specific plugins will need equivalent solutions in Jekyll. The core content (text, images, metadata) transfers cleanly.
Migrate your content in three simple steps
Enter your GraphCMS site URL — LeaveWP connects automatically.
Select Jekyll as destination and choose content options.
Download your migrated content or preview it in your browser.
Migrating from GraphCMS to Jekyll makes the most sense if you're experiencing requires graphql knowledge — no rest api option or outgrowing GraphCMS's architecture. Jekyll is best for developer blogs hosted on github pages with minimal setup.
You should migrate if: your GraphCMS site is slow, your hosting costs are climbing, you need developer flexibility, or you want to adopt a modern JAMstack architecture.
You might want to stay if: your GraphCMS site benefits from graphql-native — built from the ground up for graphql and you don't have Ruby developers on your team.
The migration itself is straightforward with LeaveWP — enter your GraphCMS URL, select Jekyll, and download your content. The more important question is whether Jekyll's architecture fits your team's skills and your project's long-term needs.
Explore more migration paths from GraphCMS or to Jekyll
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