Picking a React framework in 2026 comes down to one question most comparisons skip: how cleanly does it run on your own box without Vercel? On that axis, Astro and React Router 7 (the merged Remix) self-host most cleanly, Next.js carries the heaviest hosting-feature footprint, and TanStack Start stays client-first while everyone else leans into React Server Components.
Key Takeaways
- Remix is now React Router 7; the React version merged into the router itself.
- Astro and React Router 7 self-host on a plain Node box with the least friction.
- Next.js bets hardest on React Server Components; TanStack Start stays client-first.
- Astro ships almost no JavaScript by default, so static export is its sweet spot.
- All four can leave Vercel, but each loses something different when you do.
Why This Comparison Ignores the Vercel Default
Most “best React framework” posts assume one thing without saying it: a one-click Vercel deploy, edge functions on tap, and image optimization handled for you. Strip that away and the rankings shift. The framework that looks best on a managed platform is not always the one that runs cleanly on your own hardware.






