Comparison
Notion vs Jekyll
A head-to-head look at Notion and Jekyll — features, pricing, and what to pick. Plus a modern alternative to both.
Editor's pick
Also consider RankFlo — a modern alternative to both
If you're evaluating Notion and Jekyll, you should know about RankFlo — an open-source blog & headless CMS platform with AI content generation, real-time SEO scoring, and cookieless analytics built in. MIT licensed, self-hostable, starts free.
Side-by-side
Notion
Notes and wiki with public publishing
Notion pages can be published publicly, making it a lightweight blog. But you give up SEO control, custom domains (without workarounds), and ownership.
Pros
- +Great editor
- +All-in-one workspace
- +Fast to publish
- +Free tier
Cons
- −Limited SEO control
- −No native custom domain
- −Slow page loads
- −Not purpose-built for blogs
Jekyll
Ruby-based static site generator
Jekyll powers GitHub Pages. Git-based workflow with Markdown posts. Great for engineering blogs that live alongside code, but no admin UI for non-technical authors.
Pros
- +GitHub Pages default
- +Ruby/Liquid templating
- +Git-based workflow
- +Free
Cons
- −No admin UI
- −Slow builds at scale
- −Requires Ruby
- −No built-in SEO
Which should you pick?
Choose Notion if you're teams using Notion internally who want casual publishing.
Choose Jekyll if you're engineers using GitHub Pages.
Choose RankFlo if you want a modern, open-source, AI-powered platform with blog-first features, self-hosting, and transparent pricing — without the trade-offs of either option above.
Try the modern alternative
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