Comparing Flowbite vs Radix. Which one is better in 2025?

Flowbite Radix

Looking for a Flowbite alternative? This page compares Flowbite and Radix, two popular UI component libraries. We are comparing features, size, efficiency and usage data to help you choose which component library is better for your next project.

Flowbite
Radix
MIT
License
Open source MIT License
MIT
License
Open source MIT License
ALL
Frameworks
Flowbite is framework agnostic and works everywhere
Only React
Frameworks
Radix Themes only works with React
55
Unique components
Flowbite has 67 Components, 55 of them are unique – for example pagination and button group are considered as same.
28
Unique components
Radix Themes has 37 components, 28 of them are unique – for example radio and radio group are considered as same.
2
Built-in Themes
Flowbite has light and dark themes
2
Built-in Themes
Radix has 2 themes, colors are customizable but either for light or dark themes.
No
Supports more than two themes
Does not support more than 2 themes at the same time
No
Supports more than two themes
Does not support more than 2 themes at the same time
132KB
JavaScript size
Imported JavaScript bundle size (minified)
284kB
JavaScript size
Imported JavaScript bundle size (minified)
22
Dependencies
Flowbite has 22 third-party dependencies. Using more third-party dependencies increases the risk of security vulnerabilities, compatibility problems, and long-term maintenance headaches from deprecated packages.
72
Dependencies
Radix Themes has 72 third-party dependencies. Using more third-party dependencies increases the risk of security vulnerabilities, compatibility problems, and long-term maintenance headaches from deprecated packages.
9.6MB
Dependency size
11.9MB
Dependency size
8400
GitHub stars
6600
GitHub stars
157000
Used by open source projects
Based on GitHub's public repositories
?
Used by open source projects
No data available
390000
NPM downloads
Weekly downloads from NPM
165000
NPM downloads
Weekly downloads from NPM
Yes
CDN
Flowbite CSS file is available on CDN
No
CDN
Radix Themes CSS file is not available on CDN
No
Semantic class names
Flowbite does not use semantic CSS class names. Using semantic and descriptive CSS class names improves readability and maintainability of code independent of the current framework.
No
Semantic class names
Radix Themes does not use semantic CSS class names. Using semantic and descriptive CSS class names improves readability and maintainability of code independent of the current framework.
No
Global customizations
Flowbite requires changing class names one by one at build time to do customization
No
Global customizations
Radix Themes requires changing JavaScript props one by one at build time to do design token customization
No
works without Node.js
Flowbite requires a Node.js environment
No
works without Node.js
Radix Themes requires a Node.js environment
No
No-build version
Flowbite does not provide micro CSS files for each component
No
No-build version
Radix Themes does not provide micro CSS files for each component
No
P3 colors
Flowbite does not use wide-gamut P3 colors by default
Yes
P3 colors
Radix Themes uses wide-gamut P3 colors
Yes
RTL support
Flowbite supports right-to-left (RTL) layouts
Yes
RTL support
Radix Themes supports right-to-left (RTL) layouts
No
Runtime CSS customization
Flowbite customizations requires changing Tailwind CSS class names at build time
No
Runtime CSS customization
Radix Themes customizations requires changing JavaScript props at build time
No
Native CSS nesting
Flowbite doesn not use native CSS nesting
No
Native CSS nesting
Radix Themes doesn not use native CSS nesting
184
Open GitHub issues
As of April 2025
104
Open GitHub issues
As of April 2025

Install daisyUI

1. Install daisyUI as a Node package:

npm i -D daisyui@latest
pnpm add -D daisyui@latest
yarn add -D daisyui@latest
bun add -D daisyui@latest
deno i -D npm:daisyui@latest

2. Add daisyUI to app.css:

@import "tailwindcss";
@plugin "daisyui";

This comparison page is for informational purposes only and does not mean to criticize libraries or projects. Information is based on GitHub public data, NPM registry data and official documentation websites of the libraries. If you found any outdated information, please open a PR to update it. All trademarks, logos and brand names are the property of their respective owners.