Overview
CapRover is strong for Docker-based app and one-click deployment. Better-PaaS is for developers who want a lighter self-hosted platform: push code from Git, run apps as Docker containers, route traffic through Caddy, and keep apps, secrets, and data on infrastructure they control.
When Better-PaaS is a better fit than CapRover
Better-PaaS fits teams that want the Heroku-style workflow without handing the runtime to a hosted provider. It is especially useful for small products, internal tools, homelab services, and client apps that should stay on a VPS or private server.
- Git-based deploys
- Docker container runtime
- Automatic HTTPS through Caddy
- Postgres, Redis, and MySQL support
- No per-seat platform pricing
When CapRover may still win
Choose CapRover if you already like CapRover workflows and templates. A good comparison page should be honest: hosted platforms and larger orchestration systems can be better when you need managed global infrastructure, enterprise support, or deep ecosystem integrations.
Migration path from CapRover
Most teams start by installing Better-PaaS on a VPS, connecting the same Git repository, setting environment variables, adding a database if needed, then pointing a custom domain once the app is healthy.
- Install Better-PaaS on a Linux VPS
- Connect the repository and branch
- Copy environment variables
- Deploy and inspect logs
- Switch DNS after validation
CapRover one-click apps vs Better-PaaS catalog
Both offer dashboard deploys and one-click templates. Compare Captain CLI workflows, community app definitions, SSL handling, and which UI your team prefers for day-two operations like log tailing and rollbacks.
FAQ
Is Better-PaaS a drop-in replacement for CapRover?
Not always. Better-PaaS is self-hosted, so it replaces the deployment workflow more than the managed infrastructure contract. You own the server and the maintenance choices.
Does Better-PaaS support custom domains and HTTPS?
Yes. Better-PaaS uses Caddy to route domains and automate HTTPS certificates when DNS points to your server.