v5.31.1: 24 bug fixes. v5.30.1: 12 bug fixes. v5.29.0: 20 stability improvements. The pattern is clear, quality is now our top priority until the end of the year and throughout 2026.
We shipped significant features in 2025, including TypeScript 5.0 support, Responsive Admin Panel, Conditional Fields, Live Preview, Homepage Customization, Database Transactions, Draft & Publish improvements, Strapi AI, Shopify/Cloudinary/BigCommerce integrations, and more. But velocity came at a cost to stability.
You've been clear through GitHub issues and community feedback. The top-voted requests aren't flashy new features; they're reliability fundamentals. Better error handling, performance optimization, data transfer, and media library stability. Support tickets echo the same patterns.
We're a small team maintaining three products that serve different needs: Strapi Community Edition (open source), Strapi Enterprise Edition, and Strapi Cloud. Each one requires attention, resources, and care. As an open-source company, we face a constant balancing act: generating revenue to sustain the project while staying true to our commitment to the community that makes Strapi what it is.
It's not easy. When we prioritize one, the other can slip. And we know you've felt that in some ways, lingering bugs, features that would benefit from additional iterations, or pull requests that go unreviewed for some time.
Recent releases show the shift. v5.31, v5.30, and v5.29 merged over 70 PRs focused on quality.
Here is a summary of these updates across various parts of the codebase:
Quality isn't just our focus at the core; it extends to everything we do, from the documentation to the Marketplace and the LaunchPad demo application:
Here are the latest updates from the Marketplace:
We’ve also been busy reworking our documentation. To name a few recent improvements:
documentId and available methods.Here's the truth, though: We need your help. We're prioritizing quality and committing resources, but we can't do this alone. Community contributions such as detailed issues, PRs, and documentation updates make a massive difference.
For instance, last month's releases included 9 merged PRs from a diverse group of community contributors in countries like Colombia, India, Egypt, and Austria. Here are some of the amazing people who contributed:
The unglamorous work matters most. In open source, it's the steady contributors who review PRs, triage issues, update docs, and fix bugs that build reliable software. We see you. We value you. Making contributions count requires effort from both sides. We're making a significant push to review PRs more frequently and merge them faster. The entire team is now pitching in to support this effort. On the contributor side, following the guidelines carefully makes a huge difference—writing clear descriptions, linking related issues, including tests, and providing all the necessary context helps us merge contributions quickly and efficiently.
Building on our promising Documentation Contribution Program, we plan to provide stronger recognition and clearer incentives to code contributors, including Strapi goodies from the Strapi Shop and more!
We're also planning to start allocating unused Open Collective funds directly toward contributions to the core codebase and popular plugins currently hosted under the Strapi Community GitHub Org: such as the plugin-rest-cache, strapi-plugin-sitemap, strapi-plugin-import-export-entries, strapi-plugin-seo, and strapi-plugin-menus!
We're still finalizing the details of this program, so please stay tuned for more information. In the meantime, we invite you to check out our GitHub repository and look for issues or PRs that could use some love!
In summary, our plan is to prioritize the foundations that directly impact reliability and stability. We'll tackle as many of these topics as possible, with progress dependent on both our internal resources and community contributions.
Main focus areas currently include:
Every year, we ask the community to identify the issues that matter most to them. Join the discussion on GitHub and tell us what we should prioritize.
Your feedback and contributions directly shape our roadmap!
Pierre created Strapi with Aurélien and Jim back in 2015. He's a strong believer in open-source, remote and people-first organizations. You can also find him regularly windsurfing or mountain-biking!