48 applications, one click each

Installed properly, not just downloaded.

Every app gets its database created, its permissions set, its config written and SSL working — before your customer sees the first page. Not a zip file dropped in a folder for them to figure out.

Websites & blogs · 10

🅦

WordPress

The world's most popular CMS. Blogs, business sites, shops.

👻

Ghost

Modern publishing platform for blogs and newsletters.

💧

Drupal

Enterprise-grade CMS for large, structured sites.

Grav

Fast, flat-file CMS — no database needed.

📄

Pico

Tiny flat-file CMS — no database, just Markdown files.

✒️

Bludit

Flat-file CMS — a simple blog or site with no database at all.

📝

HTMLy

Databaseless flat-file blogging platform — Markdown powered.

🔧

Laravel

PHP framework for building custom web apps.

🇯

Joomla

Major open-source CMS — flexible and well-established.

🧱

Concrete CMS

Edit pages directly on the site — in-context editing.

E-commerce · 4

🛒

WordPress + WooCommerce

WordPress pre-configured for an online shop.

🏬

Magento (Adobe Commerce)

Powerful open-source e-commerce for larger stores.

🛍️

PrestaShop

Full-featured open-source online store.

🏪

OpenCart

Lightweight, easy-to-use online store platform.

Business, CRM & billing · 11

👔

SuiteCRM

Full-featured open-source CRM — the SugarCRM successor.

💼

Dolibarr

Open-source ERP and CRM — invoicing, stock, projects and more.

🧾

Invoice Ninja

Invoicing, quotes and payments — get paid faster.

🧮

Akaunting

Free accounting software — invoices, expenses and reports.

🐷

Firefly III

Personal finance manager — budgets, bills and reports.

⏱️

Kimai

Time tracking for teams and freelancers — timesheets and invoicing.

📦

Snipe-IT

IT asset management — track hardware, licences and who has what.

❤️

Monica

Personal CRM — remember the details about people you care about.

💳

WHMCS

Client management and billing for web hosts. Needs your own licence.

📣

Mautic

Open-source marketing automation — campaigns and contacts.

🤝

EspoCRM

Fast, lightweight open-source CRM.

Support & helpdesk · 3

🎫

osTicket

The most widely used open-source helpdesk and ticket system.

🛠️

GLPI

IT asset management and helpdesk — inventory, tickets and more.

phpMyFAQ

Open-source FAQ and knowledge base.

Files, docs & productivity · 10

☁️

Nextcloud

Self-hosted file sync, calendar and collaboration.

📚

BookStack

Self-hosted platform for organising documentation and wikis.

📖

DokuWiki

Simple, database-free wiki — great for documentation.

🌍

MediaWiki

The wiki engine that powers Wikipedia.

📋

Kanboard

Lean kanban board for personal and team project management.

🔖

wallabag

Self-hosted read-it-later — save articles and read them anywhere.

🔗

Shaarli

Personal, minimalist bookmark manager — fast and database-free.

🎓

Moodle

Open-source learning management system — run an online school.

📋

LimeSurvey

Powerful open-source surveys and questionnaires.

🗂️

Pydio Cells

Self-hosted file sharing and document collaboration.

Community, media & tools · 10

👥

HumHub

Build your own social network — for teams, clubs or communities.

🖼️

Piwigo

Self-hosted photo gallery — albums, tags and a proper viewer.

📊

Matomo

Privacy-friendly, self-hosted web analytics.

✉️

Roundcube Webmail

Browser-based email client for your mail accounts.

📧

phpList

Open-source newsletter and email campaign manager.

📡

FreshRSS

Self-hosted RSS feed aggregator — fast, light, multi-user.

🟢

Cachet Status Page

Beautiful open-source status page for your services.

How it works

Three clicks, then it's running.

What actually happens when I click install?

WebDeck downloads the application, creates a database and a database user for it, sets the correct file ownership and permissions, writes the configuration file with the right credentials, and makes sure SSL is working for the domain. By the time it says "done", the app is live and ready to log into.

Can I install into a subfolder?

Yes — set the path when installing. Leave it blank to install at the root of the domain. Useful for putting a wiki at /docs or a shop at /shop.

Do apps that don't need a database work too?

Yes. Grav, DokuWiki, HTMLy and Kanboard are flat-file — WebDeck skips the database step for them and just gets on with it.

Some apps need Composer — does WebDeck handle that?

Yes, and it matters. Several applications (Snipe-IT, Kimai, HumHub, Monica, Invoice Ninja) are published as source code with their dependencies missing — download them yourself and they'll fail with a fatal error on the first page load. WebDeck ships with Composer and installs those dependencies as part of the install, so the app is genuinely ready to use when it says it's done.

Do the apps stay up to date?

The installer always fetches the current release at the moment you install — it asks the project what the latest version is rather than relying on a version number baked into WebDeck. So you get today's version, not whatever was current when the panel was released.

Do I need a WHMCS licence to install WHMCS?

Yes. WebDeck installs the software and sets up the database, but WHMCS is commercial software and you'll need your own licence from them to run it.

Can my customers install apps themselves?

Yes — the app installer is available to customers for their own websites. That's usually the point: they install WordPress themselves at 11pm, and you don't get a support ticket.

48 apps. Zero effort.

Free to download, installs in minutes, and your customers can help themselves.