A polished job board template designed for startups and recruiters, with four complete pages, Figma design files, and easy customization across multiple frameworks.
Optimized layouts that look great and work seamlessly across desktop, tablet, and mobile devices.
Clean code structure and well-organized files make customization straightforward and efficient for developers.
Includes Figma design files for visual reference, design handoff, and easy collaboration with designers.
Includes job listing, job post details, create job form, and sign-in pages ready to use.
Professional documentation helps you understand the codebase structure and get started with development quickly.
Available in Next.js with TypeScript, Vue.js with Vite, and HTML with Alpine.js versions.
If you're looking to create a professional job board website with an intuitive UI, you should consider using JobBoard by Cruip. JobBoard is an elegant and highly customizable Tailwind CSS job portal template packed with powerful features to help you create the perfect job listing website within minutes. The theme comes with 4 beautifully designed pages including a sign-in page, a job post form page, a job post page, and the job board listing page.
Whatever stack you use, this theme has got you covered. It is coded in HTML, Next.js, and Vue.js. The code is professionally-made and documented. And if that wasn't enough, it also comes with the Figma design files. Below is a detailed list of what you can expect from this template.
The template comes in three distinct versions to match your preferred development environment. The Next.js version runs on version 16 with App Router and includes TypeScript support along with examples of React's data fetching patterns. The Vue version is built on Vue 3 with Vite 6 for fast development. The HTML version pairs with Alpine.js v3 and ships with pre-compiled CSS, allowing changes via Tailwind CLI.
Figma files are included with the template for visual reference and handoff purposes. These files are intended as design references rather than fully componentized design systems, making them useful for understanding layouts and collaborating with designers on customizations.