What’s the Future of Spring and Spring Boot in 2026?

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Asked By TechExplorer88 On

Hey everyone! I'm a student looking for some insights on the future of Spring and Spring Boot as we approach 2026 and beyond. I have some professional experience with TypeScript but found the rapid changes in frameworks a bit overwhelming. I want to transition into something more structured and predictable for the long haul.

I've narrowed it down to either C# (.NET) or Java (Spring/Spring Boot). Initially, I was leaning towards C# because many indexes suggest it's on the rise while Java is more stable or slightly declining. Plus, I've heard that the .NET community is larger and more welcoming.

However, I noticed a higher number of job openings requiring Java + Spring in my area, especially for remote positions, so I'm starting to learn it.

I'd love to hear from those who work with Spring/Spring Boot. Do you think it'll still be a solid backend choice by 2026? Will it maintain relevance compared to .NET, Node.js, and Go in the long run? From a career standpoint, is focusing on Java + Spring still a good move? Thanks for any insights!

1 Answer

Answered By CodeWiz42 On

Spring Boot isn't going anywhere! Enterprise Java is basically here to stay, and Spring plays a huge role in that—like 90% of Java backends depend on it. There's a massive job market out there because many companies still rely on legacy systems that need maintenance, not to mention new projects that choose Spring for its stability and ecosystem. Sure, Node.js changes super fast, but that can lead to challenges when you're building something that needs longevity without constant rewrites.

DevGuru99 -

Totally get that! I've noticed Node gets new flashy features all the time, while Java just keeps doing its thing!

Learning Spring seems like a solid plan for the future, even if you think about moving to another ecosystem later!

CoderDude77 -

Learning Spring Boot is indeed a timeless skill for software engineering! It’s worth considering, even if you might explore C# or Ruby on Rails down the line.

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