From early days, "views" has been the killer feature of Drupal. Views is a powerful querying tool built into Drupal that allows dynamic lists and displays of content to be created without writing custom code.
23 Apr 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Drupal AI Initiative: From Leuven to Athens: Celebrating One Year Since the Drupal AI Initiative Took Shape
One year ago, at Drupal Developer Days in Leuven, something special happened.
The Drupal AI Initiative was not officially launched yet. That would happen later, in June. But Leuven was where the spark happened. It was where the first real momentum came together. Where conversations turned into commitment. Where a shared belief became a shared plan.

Five companies stepped up to kickstart the initiative: Dropsolid, Acquia, 1xINTERNET, FreelyGive, and Salsa Digital. Together, they helped turn an ambitious idea into the beginning of a movement.
Now, one year later, as we gather again at Drupal Developer Days in Athens, we celebrate one year since that moment of conception.
Leuven was where the initiative was kickstarted. June was when it officially went live. Athens is where we celebrate how far it has come.
A year of momentum, collaboration, and delivery
The Drupal AI Initiative was created with a bold ambition: to help Drupal become the leading open source CMS for AI-powered digital experiences.
But from the beginning, this was never just about adding AI features.
It was about building AI into Drupal in a way that reflects the values of the Drupal community: open, flexible, responsible, transparent, and collaborative. It was about giving organizations the tools to innovate with AI while keeping control over governance, content, security, editorial workflows, and long-term digital strategy.
Over the past year, the initiative has grown from a spark in Leuven into one of the most ambitious collaborative efforts in Drupal's history.
What has been delivered?
Since the official launch of the Drupal AI Initiative, the team has made major progress. The amount of installs is growing significantly, 13980 at the time of writing. Adoption is accelerating. According to shared data we're growing at about 260 sites per week and accelerating.
This is only the sites that share numbers, the real share is much higher.

Growing numbers of Drupal AI Partners
Between Drupal Con Vienna and Chicago, the initiative added 12 new partners, a total of 34, representing a 50% increase in participation. We are on track to match this growth in support between now and DrupalCon Rotterdam, a key goal for this year.

Delivering capabilities at scale
The initiative also successfully established and executed the delivery management RFP process, putting important operational frameworks in place, including:
- Partner expectations documentation
- Onboarding processes
- Development sprint processes
- Contribution tracking
- Team planning sheets
- Weekly status reporting
These may sound like operational details, but they are what make collaboration at scale possible. They help turn enthusiasm into structure, and structure into delivery.
The Drupal AI Initiative has become the largest multi-company collaboration in Drupal community history.
- Dries Buytaert
The initiative is now actively funding critical roles across multiple organizations, including product management, innovation management, technical leadership, and program management. This marks a major milestone: the Drupal AI Initiative has become the largest multi-company collaboration in Drupal community history.
The 2026 roadmap was finalised earlier this year, informed by customer demand and industry insight. Delivery is actively underway.
At the same time, marketing efforts have been elevated to position Drupal as the leading AI-powered open source CMS globally, supported by ongoing storytelling and visibility through the Drupal AI Initiative blog.
Significant rise contribution
Focused effort on strategically important features, combined with a growing number of partners committing resources and strong community participation, has driven a significant increase in momentum and impact.
The tag clouds below visually represent the many Drupal community members who in the past 12 months have contributed to the AI Initiative (sized according to number of fixed issues worked on). Includes code and non code contributions.


The following organizations have also contributed to the Drupal AI Initiative in the past year.

Marketing Drupal AI
From small beginnings with Paul Johnson and Frederik Wouters taking on marketing, we now have a cross disciplinary high performing team with 10 leads across areas of specialization.

Focussing on introducing Drupal to new audiences the emphasis has been on webinars, participating in external events and organising major new customer facing events of our own. These include Drupal AI Summit Paris and New York City (14th May 2026), The AI Summit London (10-11 June 2026) and the latest Enterprise AI Summit Rotterdam (28 September 2026).

Our work has included facilitating Southwark Council, London, winning Digital Leaders AI Impact Award 2026, producing video case studies and highlighting major new AI features announced during the DriesNote with social video content. All these activities have substantially raised Drupal's profile to a wider audience.
Building toward Rotterdam
The next major milestone is already taking shape.
In Rotterdam, the initiative will launch an exclusive Drupal Enterprise AI event, available only to Drupal AI Initiative partners. The event will bring together European decision-makers aboard the SS Rotterdam for peer networking, customer case studies, and strategic conversations about building AI-powered content management solutions with Drupal.
Participation in this event is limited to partners who join the Drupal AI Initiative by June 30.
That creates a powerful moment for companies that want to be part of Drupal's AI future. The initiative is scaling, the roadmap is active, the team is growing, and the opportunity to help shape what comes next is open now.

A strong foundation for what comes next
The Drupal AI Initiative is in a strong position.
With $380,000 in cash and $1.5 million in in-kind contributions, more than 50 contributors from partners, the initiative has the resources and commitment needed to continue scaling. The plan is to onboard an additional 12 partners by Rotterdam, further strengthening the team and accelerating delivery.
The message is clear: You counted on Drupal AI, and we delivered. Now we want to create more efficiency and scale.
That is what this next phase is about. More delivery. More visibility. More impact.

Thank you to the people who made this possible
This milestone belongs to many people.
It belongs to everyone who joined those early conversations in Leuven.
It belongs to Frederik Wouters, who brought the right people together at the right moment and helped create the spark that started it all.
It belongs to the five companies that kickstarted the initiative: Dropsolid, Acquia, 1xINTERNET, FreelyGive, and Salsa Digital.
It belongs to every partner, contributor, sponsor, strategist, developer, product thinker, marketer, and community member who has helped move this initiative forward.
And it belongs to the wider Drupal community, whose openness and willingness to collaborate make initiatives like this possible.
You can still join
The Drupal AI Initiative is growing, and companies can still become part of it.
If your organization believes in the future of Drupal, if you want to help shape responsible AI in open source, or if you want to be part of the group building the next generation of AI-powered content management, now is the time to join.
Become part of the 34 makers already helping to build Drupal's AI future.
To join the Drupal AI Initiative as an organization and become a partner, contact Dominique at dominique@dropsolid.com.
From Leuven to Athens, this has been an incredible first year.
And the best part? We are only just getting started!
23 Apr 2026 2:13pm GMT
22 Apr 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Centarro: How to Know If Your eCommerce Developer is Failing You
A business spends hundreds of thousands of dollars with a developer or agency to build an eCommerce website, endures years of instability and missed deadlines, and then concludes that the platform just doesn't work. They start eyeing Shopify or whatever choice platform the first consultant they engage recommends, hoping the grass will be greener. Meanwhile, the actual issue-an underqualified or negligent service provider-walks away unexamined.
Developer problems are often disguised as platform problems. We've seen this situation many times with Drupal Commerce implementations that aren't performing as desired. We've even solved issues merchants put up with for years in a matter of hours. It's not that we're special, though we do know our own platform better than anyone else. We believe any competent Drupal developer would also be able to identify and solve these issues, possibly just as quickly.
So how do you tell the difference? How do you know your issues stem from your developer, and not your platform?
Below, we'll give you the language and the lens to evaluate whether your developer is actually serving you well, or whether they're the reason your Drupal Commerce site feels like it's held together with duct tape and bubblegum.
How some developers get in over their heads
A company needs a Drupal website with eCommerce capabilities, so they search for a Drupal developer. Maybe they already have a Drupal website and want to add some commerce features. Either way, they find a freelancer who has built blogs, nonprofit sites, and maybe a university portal with some advanced functionality. That person says, "Sure, I can handle commerce. It's just another module." For a basic eCommerce website with minimal traffic, maybe they can.
22 Apr 2026 8:41pm GMT
1xINTERNET blog: Search Behaviour Is Changing, Your Marketing Strategy Should Too
Search behaviour is changing as AI-generated answers take over SERPs, reducing clicks and redefining performance metrics. Understand the AI impact on CTR, SEO, and why your marketing strategy needs to adapt.
22 Apr 2026 10:45am GMT
21 Apr 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Freelock Blog: When Views meets Drupal Canvas -- getting dynamic content into your Canvas page
When Views meets Drupal Canvas -- getting dynamic content into your Canvas page

21 Apr 2026 3:00pm GMT
Jacob Rockowitz: Drupal (AI) Playground: Training and practicing building a module using AI
Successes and failures
I am continually experiencing both successes and failures while playing in my Drupal (AI) playground. My failures usually come from expecting too much of an AI, especially when I ask it to do too many things in a single prompt. My successes with AI come when I keep things useful, simple, and achievable.
Building something useful, simple, and achievable with AI
As I've learned about and maintained new ecosystems in Drupal, I like to review all available plugins. For the Webform module, I created reports for elements, handlers, variants, and exporters. For ECA, I developed an ECA Report module. For the Meta Tag module, I contributed a patch to get a Meta Tag plugin report committed. I think having a way to browse a module's or ecosystem's plugins helps developers understand what tools are available. A Drush command for exporting plugin definitions could be used by both humans and AI.
In the past, creating and maintaining a report could be time-consuming. The new reality is that AI makes it easier to build and maintain simple things like reports. One of the most common anecdotes I hear from non-technical people who "vibe code" is that they are building websites or reports to display information.
My goal was to create a report that lists all plugin managers, plugin definitions, and individual plugin details.
There ain't nothing fancy here
The Plugin Report module I created with AI is nothing special. Claude Code's only challenge was getting the PHP introspection code to pass PHPStan's level 6 coding standards. In many ways, this module served as an exercise to reinforce my ability to guide an AI in the right direction. My biggest...Read More
21 Apr 2026 12:59pm GMT
Specbee: What tools and services you need for a successful Drupal migration
Confused about which Drupal migration tools you actually need? This guide breaks down the essential toolkit and when to bring in expert services.
21 Apr 2026 8:40am GMT
HOOK_DEV_ALTER(): Manage Displays: Canvas vs Display Builder (Part 2)
When building a Drupal site, we want to control how our content looks in different contexts, e.g. the full display for standalone or the card display for overview pages. In Part 2 of this series we compare how Drupal Canvas and Display Builder handle display configuration by building a node display for a blog content type.
21 Apr 2026 8:40am GMT
Smartbees: Automated Website Provisioning
See how we optimized the administrative workflows, making it easy to manage numerous websites simultaneously and launch new instances on demand.
21 Apr 2026 6:48am GMT
Très Bien Blog: Proposal for an LLM policy for Drupal Core contribution
Proposal for an LLM policy for Drupal Core contribution
I've been following and participating in the conversation about applying AI tools to the Drupal core issue queue, and the broader community. I've been listening, reading, and experimenting quite a bit in and out of Drupal. It's been a wild ride since last December and for the past few weeks a few things started to solidify.
theodore
21 Apr 2026 12:30am GMT
20 Apr 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #549 - Catching up with the DDEV Team
In Episode 549, Randy Fay and Stas Zhuk join us to discuss what DDEV is, recent improvements, and where it's headed. Module of the week is the DDEV Drupal Contrib add-on. Randy and Stas discuss priorities like reliability, consistent UX, add-ons discoverability, and new features including revamped ddev share with Cloudflare and rootless Podman support. They also cover coder.ddev.com, a cloud-based DDEV environment built on coder.com for easier onboarding and contribution, plus sustainability, community support, and challenges such as AI-driven PR volume and Stas's development constraints in Ukraine.
For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/549
Topics
- Module of the Week - DDEV Drupal Contrib
- DDev Drupal Contri Overview
- Contrib Workflow Q&A
- Drush in Core Debate
- Add-on Registry and Contact
- Drupal AI Summit Plug
- What Is DDev
- Stas Origin Story
- Recent Releases and Priorities
- DDev Share and Podman
- Developer Experience Changes
- Database Upgrade Pain Points
- Coder DDev Cloud IDE
- Cloud DDEV Basics
- VS Code Remote Workflow
- Pair Programming Training Wins
- Docker Desktop Alternatives
- Onboarding Teams Faster
- Windows Support Reality
- Building Through War
- Roadmap Env File Fixes
- Beyond Drupal Adoption
- Addons Discovery Tools
- Funding Community Health
- AI Pull Requests Pressure
- AI Agents MCP Plans
- How To Get Involved
Resources
DDEV - https://ddev.com/ DDEV Add-on Registry - https://addons.ddev.com/ Introducing coder.ddev.com: DDEV in the Cloud - https://ddev.com/blog/coder-ddev-com-announcement/ About Stas Zhuk - https://ddev.com/blog/introducing-maintainer-stas/ Power Through Blackouts: How DDEV Community Helped Me in Ukraine - https://ddev.com/blog/power-through-blackouts-ddev-community-support/ Drush command in core - https://www.drupal.org/project/drupal/issues/3453474 Drush's Final Act - https://weitzman.github.io/blog/drush-final-act coder.com - https://coder.com/ Service hosting coder.ddev.com - https://www.hetzner.com/ Funding DDEV - https://ddev.com/blog/sustainability-for-ddev/ Gen AI DDEV newsletter note - https://ddev.com/blog/ddev-march-2026-newsletter/ Sharing Coder.ddev.com workspaces - https://github.com/ddev/coder-ddev/issues/80
Guests
Stas Zhuk - stasadev Randy Fay - ddev.com rfay
Hosts
Nic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi Rod Martin - DrupalHelps.com imrodmartin
Module of the Week
with Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu
DDEV Drupal Contrib - DDEV integration for developing Drupal contrib projects. As a general philosophy, your contributed module/theme is the center of the universe.
20 Apr 2026 6:00pm GMT
The Drop Times: Sovereignty Expires; Licences Don’t
Europe is finally getting serious about digital sovereignty, and getting it half right. The instinct to "Buy European" is sound, but the frameworks being built around it are solving for the wrong variable. Ownership and headquarters are snapshots; they tell you where power sits today, not where it will sit after the next acquisition. Skype had every European credential imaginable. Microsoft shut it down in 2025.
The missing piece is durability. Dries and Nicholas argue, convincingly, that a sovereignty score without an open-source licensing requirement is a sovereignty score with an expiry date. The GPL licence did not stop Oracle from acquiring Sun Microsystems, but it ensured that MySQL could not be discontinued. MariaDB exists today because someone had the legal right to fork before the deal closed. That right is structural; it does not depend on which flag flies over the headquarters.
The forthcoming Cloud and AI Development Act is the real test. Europe can use it to define what makes sovereignty resilient: open licensing as a hard gate for mission-critical procurement, and supply chain assessments that distinguish between dependencies that can be replaced quickly and those that would take years to rebuild. Anything short of that risks becoming a checklist rather than a strategy.
With that, here are the key stories from the past week.
DISCOVER DRUPAL
- Drupal Clarifies Marketplace and Community Pathways for Site Templates
- Drupal Arabic Translation Progress Reaches 42%
- AI Schema Module Introduces Structured Drupal Data Exports for LLM Workflows
- Dalia 1.0.0-beta3 Introduces Haiku Retrieval and Expands Developer Workflow Controls
- LocalGov Bus Data Module Brings UK Transport Data Integration to Drupal
EVENT
- Mountain Camp Plans 10-Year Anniversary Edition for 2027, Calls for Organisers
- Drupal Camp Asheville 2026 Opens Sponsorship Opportunities
- A11yTalks to Host AmyJune Hineline Session on Sustaining Accessibility Beyond Launch
ORGANIZATION NEWS
DRUPAL COMMUNITY
SECURITY
Additional developments from across the Drupal ecosystem were published during the week. Readers can follow The Drop Times on LinkedIn, Twitter, Bluesky, and Facebook for ongoing updates. The publication is also active on Drupal Slack in the #thedroptimes channel.
Alka Elizabeth
Sub-editor
The Drop Times
20 Apr 2026 2:16pm GMT
Drupal AI Initiative: Drupal Is All In on AI. Now Comes the Hard Part
Original article posted by Christoph Breidert on 1xINTERNET website
Over a decade ago, I co-founded 1xINTERNET on the conviction that Drupal was the best platform for ambitious web applications. That bet paid off. But recently, as AI began disrupting our industry, I found myself facing an unfamiliar feeling: uncertainty. For the first time in my career, the path forward wasn't entirely clear.
If you are a decision-maker navigating this shift, you likely feel the same way. We are all trying to figure out how to leverage AI's huge potential without compromising enterprise security, compliance, or content quality.
The good news is that while the broader AI landscape remains turbulent, the direction for content management systems is becoming clear.
Christoph Breidert

Christoph Breidert facilitating a Drupal AI workshop at DrupalCon Chicago 2026.
When the Drupal AI Initiative was founded in June 2025 by 1xINTERNET, Acquia, DropSolid, FreelyGive, and Salsa Digital, our mission was to chart that exact path. Today, alongside Niels Aers, my role is to manage the AI product direction so that organizations can confidently bring AI into production.
Since the founding, over 30 leading companies have joined the initiative. But a defining moment happened recently at DrupalCon Chicago 2026. During his keynote - the "Driesnote" - Drupal founder Dries Buytaert bluntly asked the community regarding the AI shift: Are you in or are you out?
The undeniable energy from the community and the rapidly intensifying momentum proved one thing: Drupal is all in on AI.

But what does "all in" actually mean? We aren't just talking about adding superficial features like chatbots or simple text generators. We have built a powerful agentic infrastructure natively into Drupal. This provides us with a robust foundation, allowing organizations to build complex AI applications and deploy autonomous agents capable of executing multi-step workflows on their behalf.
What an Agentic CMS actually requires
Let's be clear: Agentic AI delivers incredible velocity, and every organization from SMEs to global enterprises needs that speed. But deploying autonomous agents without control is a liability. You need AI infrastructure that accelerates your workflows while ensuring that this speed doesn't destroy your content quality or violate your compliance rules.
This requires a robust governance foundation to run the infrastructure safely. The Drupal AI Initiative has spent the past months building exactly that. These are the final pieces we have built to complete the production-ready foundation:
- AI Guardrails: Configurable rules that intercept both outgoing requests and incoming AI responses. Whether it's preventing the exposure of personal data (PII), ensuring prompt safety, or mitigating legal liability, guardrails keep the AI agents within defined boundaries.
- AI Observability: Complete transparency into what your AI agents are doing. Every prompt, token usage metric, and model response is logged, providing a clear audit trail for compliance and cost optimization.
- Context Control Center: AI models are useless without context. This system acts as a router, intelligently feeding the right organizational data (and only the right data) to the LLM based on the user's specific task.
Introducing AI Content Reviews
Let's separate the hype from reality: The core foundation of Drupal AI is production-ready today. With a secure governance infrastructure now in place, we are shifting from building the engine to delivering the applications. We are shipping out-of-the-box features so organizations can immediately benefit without building complex workflows from scratch.
The first major capability rolling out is AI Content Reviews. This is not a future roadmap concept, it is a real, tangible feature designed to close the quality gap for large websites by acting as a continuous, background quality assurance partner.
It provides scalable, AI-assisted content governance that integrates naturally into how editors already work. The system evaluates content against your organization's specific rules, such as brand voice, legal compliance, SEO, and accessibility. It flags issues, explains them in plain language, and proposes concrete fixes. Crucially, human oversight remains the starting point: an editor simply reviews the flagged issues and can apply the suggested fixes with a single click.

AI Review Management Overview
Upcoming features
AI Content Reviews is just the first application of our agentic infrastructure. Following close behind is AI-powered semantic search with synthesized summaries. This allows visitors to find what they need through meaning rather than keywords, enabling the site to surface direct answers instead of just a list of results.
We are also actively packaging AI assistants embedded natively across editorial workflows, site-building, and end-user interfaces. These capabilities have been thoroughly explored and validated in our innovation workstream and are now being readied for production use.
Want to see the full picture of what we are building? You can explore the complete Drupal AI Roadmap to see exactly where the initiative is heading next.

Overview Drupal AI Roadmap 2026.
Drupal's architectural advantage
Why build this directly into Drupal instead of relying on external AI services or other CMS platforms? It comes down to a fundamental technological advantage. Many modern CMS platforms, especially closed SaaS products and pure headless systems, force you to rely on disconnected external API wrappers to communicate with AI. This architectural limitation means your developers have to manually rebuild your existing user permissions, workflows, and access rules in a separate middleware layer just to keep the AI secure.
Drupal AI has a distinct head start because of its deep internal architecture:
- Co-location with the Content Graph: AI models are only as good as the context they can access. By embedding AI orchestration directly within Drupal, the AI has native, zero-latency access to your entire structured content graph. There is no integration friction.
- Native Permissions & Access Control: Because Drupal's entity system and field-level access controls are so deeply integrated, the AI operates entirely within your existing permissions. It cannot expose, analyze, or modify content the user shouldn't see.
- Provider-Agnostic Abstraction: Similar to what makes frameworks like LangChain powerful, Drupal AI abstracts the LLM providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, local models, etc.). But unlike external middle-tiers, Drupal enforces strict schema typing before data ever hits your database, ensuring structural integrity.
An Unmatched Ecosystem for AI Agents: Autonomous agents need tools to interact with the outside world. Because Drupal already possesses a massive, deeply established ecosystem of enterprise integrations, your AI agents can directly interact with your CRMs, ERPs, and marketing platforms. You don't have to build custom API connectors for your AI to take action across your broader tech stack.

Moving forward
The uncertainty of the AI era remains, no one knows exactly what the landscape will look like in three years. I'm being honest about that. But what I do know is that the architecture we are building is solid, the foundation is ready, the community driving it is fully committed and has the resources.
If you are evaluating whether Drupal is the right foundation for AI-powered content management, you don't have to figure that out alone. The Drupal AI Partners network brings together specialized agencies with deep experience deploying exactly these capabilities. If you are ready to move from evaluation to implementation, that is the right place to start.
We are all building in conditions none of us have navigated before.
The difference is what we are building on.
20 Apr 2026 1:28pm GMT
18 Apr 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
Dominique De Cooman: Drupal Is No Longer Just a CMS Decision. It’s an AI Infrastructure Decision.
18 Apr 2026 10:35am GMT
16 Apr 2026
Drupal.org aggregator
The Drop Times: Erdfisch Expands nerdfisch DevBits into Public Drupal Code Archive
Reusable fixes often remain confined to individual projects, forcing developers to solve the same problems repeatedly. erdfisch has expanded its internal DevBits system into a publicly accessible archive, exposing working Drupal code snippets drawn directly from project work. The collection prioritises immediate implementation over explanation, making internal solutions available without reshaping them into long-form documentation.
16 Apr 2026 2:41pm GMT
1xINTERNET blog: Drupal Is All In on AI. Now Comes the Hard Part
I co-founded 1xINTERNET on the conviction that Drupal was the right platform for ambitious web applications. AI changed that certainty. Here is what the Drupal AI Initiative is building, what organizations are getting first, and why the direction is clear.
16 Apr 2026 11:00am GMT
Drupal Starshot blog: Differentiating Marketplace Site Templates and Community Site Templates
Site templates are available through two distinct pathways, each serving different needs within the community.
The official Drupal.org Marketplace provides a curated collection of site templates that meet certain quality standards, and are built on top of Drupal CMS as a foundation.
Community templates offer an alternative pathway for innovation and experimentation without the constraints of the curation process, by publishing the template as a general project on Drupal.org.
Official Marketplace Site Templates
The Drupal.org Marketplace are built on top of Drupal CMS, and curated to provide new users with confidence that they're starting with a consistent, solid and professionally built foundation that follows established best practices.
Key characteristics
-
Templates undergo a review processes
-
Must follow Drupal CMS best practices for security, accessibility (WCAG 2.2 AA), performance, and code quality
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In the beginning, focus is solely on growing Drupal CMS adoption; site templates accelerate adoption of Drupal CMS by providing context relevant demo content and Drupal Canvas-compatible theme
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Clear documentation, maintenance commitments, and user support expectations
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Currently open to Drupal Certified Partners (for organizations) and Ripplemakers (for individuals or very small companies). Apply to become a creator here.
Benefits
-
Consistency for users who need reliable, production-ready starting points
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Quality assurance through professional review processes
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Support and maintenance commitments for long-term sustainability
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Revenue opportunities for professional template creators
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Sustainability for the Drupal Association through revenue sharing
Community Site Templates
Anyone interested in contributing a template can do so now, by publishing it as a general project on Drupal.org. All free site templates, including marketplace templates, are general projects for packaging and distribution purposes. Community site templates will be considered for inclusion in the Drupal.org Marketplace based on their compatibility with the outlined criteria.
Key characteristics
-
Can be published without formal review or approval
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Not bound by the same standards as Marketplace templates
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Can be built using Drupal CMS or Drupal Core
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Available to all community members
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Can take risks and explore directions that might not fit Marketplace criteria
Benefits:
-
Innovation by removing barriers to experimentation
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Diversity of approaches and implementations
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Learning opportunities for the community to explore what's possible
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Stepping stones that might eventually evolve into Marketplace templates
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Lower barriers to entry for community contribution
16 Apr 2026 3:10am GMT
