Learn how Nextcloud and OpenCloud differ in their key features, development activity, technology stack and community adoption, so you can decide which of these cloud file sync & share tools is best for you.
Activity score

Stars
Forks
Last commit
Repository age
License
Self-hosted
Activity score

Nextcloud appears to have several advantages over OpenCloud, particularly in popularity and maturity. Consider your specific needs regarding popularity, activity, technology, maturity, licensing and features when making your decision.
Nextcloud significantly outpaces OpenCloud in community adoption with 36,143 stars compared to 5,706 stars on GitHub. This 6.3x difference suggests Nextcloud has a much larger and more active community. In terms of developer contributions, Nextcloud has 5,065 forks, indicating strong developer engagement.
Both projects show recent activity, with Nextcloud last updated 34 minutes ago and OpenCloud 13 hours ago.
Both tools share common technology foundations, being built with JavaScript, CSS, Bash, Typescript, PHP. However, they differ in their additional technology choices: Nextcloud uses SCSS, Vue while OpenCloud leverages JSX, Golang.
Nextcloud has been in development longer, starting 10 years ago, compared to OpenCloud which began 2 years ago. This 8.7-year head start suggests Nextcloud may have more mature features and established processes.
The projects use different licenses: Nextcloud is licensed under AGPL-3.0 while OpenCloud uses Apache-2.0. Consider the licensing requirements when choosing for your project.
Both tools serve similar use cases in Cloud File Sync & Share. However, they also have distinct specializations: Nextcloud also focuses on Collaborative Workspaces, Storage.
Both Nextcloud and OpenCloud offer self-hosting capabilities, giving you full control over your data and infrastructure.