Welcome to the Umbraco Community!

The Umbraco Community is at the heart of the Umbraco ecosystem. It’s built on people coming together to share ideas, help each other, and make Umbraco better every day.

Come see how the Community stays connected, what makes it such a great place to be, and how you can join in and get involved. We always have room for more people to join!

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Get involved in the community

There's so many ways to get involved in the Umbraco community. 

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New here? Welcome! We have a complete newcomer's guide to Umbraco and the Umbraco Community waiting for you.

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No matter your interests, skills and time availability, there’s a way for you to participate in the Umbraco community. 

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Umbraco Meetups are a great way to engage with the Umbraco community and meet other like-minded people.

See what's happening

Join a meetup or an event near you - see all upcoming Umbraco events here

Blog posts from the Umbraco Community

Explore the latest blog posts from our community. Want to add your future blog posts to the list? Contact us here and let us know!

Codegarden 2026 - a little late, because it gave me something to build

A few weeks ago I was in Copenhagen for my first Codegarden, and one quiet thought has stuck with me...

by Mike Isaacs

Exploring Umbraco AI for end users

Providing reliable, proactive and personable freelance support for website updates, SEO, lead generation and ongoing marketing strategies.

by Hayley Mark

Umbraco 18 Finally gives reusable content the home it deserves

There are flashy features that get everyone excited—new editors, AI integrations, shiny dashboards. They look great in a keynote and are fun to show off. But then there are those features that, quietly, just fix long-standing headaches. For me, the new Library and Elements in Umbraco 18 are absolutely in that second group.When I first saw these demoed at Codegarden, I immediately thought, "Here we go. This is definitely going to be one of my favorite updates since a long time." It's not a brand-new idea. In fact, it's almost more impressive because it turns something most experienced Umbraco developers have hacked together themselves into an actual, official feature.If you’ve built Umbraco websites for any length of time, you’ve probably done this: made a “Globals “ of “Various Content” node and hidden it, set up a Shared Content folder, tossed reusable stuff onto a Settings page, or kept a folder with call-to-actions, testimonials, author profiles, or banners. None of which are even real pages.Did it work? Yeah… most of the time. But let's be honest—it always felt like a kludge.That kind of content never really belonged alongside website pages. This “content” didn’t need URLs; users weren’t supposed to visit it. We only structured things this way because editors needed somewhere to manage reusable pieces. For years, we just pretended these were documents because Umbraco left us no other option.With Umbraco 18, the compromise disappears.

by Dave Jonker

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