After MkDocs 1.x: Fragmentation, Risk, and What Comes Next
For more than a decade, MkDocs, especially when paired with Material for MkDocs, became the default answer for engineering documentation. It was simple enough for technical writers, familiar to Python-centric platform teams, and polished enough that most organizations never needed to build a documentation frontend of their own. That consensus has now fractured. As of 2026, teams still running MkDocs 1.x are no longer just choosing a mature stack, they are accepting a growing maintenance, compatibility, and software supply chain risk.
MkDocs earned its position because it solved the right problem at the right level of complexity. It gave teams a straightforward content model, a single configuration file, a Python packaging story that fit naturally into existing developer environments, and a clean separation between content, theme, and deployment. Material for MkDocs then raised the ceiling dramatically. Search, dark mode, responsive navigation, blog support, admonitions, tabs, code annotations, and a broad plugin ecosystem turned what began as a documentation generator into a complete publishing stack.
For engineering organizations, that combination was unusually efficient:
- Technical writers could stay in Markdown.
- Engineers could treat docs like any other Git-based project.
- Platform teams could build and deploy sites with the same CI pipelines used elsewhere.
- Open-source programs could publish polished public documentation without standing up a custom app.
In practice, MkDocs plus Material became the reference architecture for documentation in many Python-centric and infrastructure-heavy teams. It was not the only option, but it was often the least controversial one.