Webflow makes GSAP 100% free – plus more updates

95 mefengl 32 5/2/2025, 11:09:52 AM webflow.com ↗

Comments (32)

wewewedxfgdf · 4h ago
Other fun animation sites:

https://svgartista.net

https://animejs.com

https://animate.style

https://animista.net

LLMs are pretty good at this stuff too - just ask the LLM to use one of these resources when making your thing.

SloopJon · 9h ago
The obvious question is, what does free mean? Here's the license:

https://gsap.com/community/standard-license/

Basically freeware with express prohibitions on competing with Webflow.

akudha · 8h ago
Isn't that fair? What am I missing?
stuartjohnson12 · 8h ago
It's a land grab that, if GSAP becomes a standard, makes it that much harder to compete with Webflow.

For example GSAP will now never make its way into Figma or Framer which is a staple of the design workflows of many teams. This move by Webflow makes GSAP a line of demarkation between Figma-based workflows, Framer-based workflows, and Webflow-based workflows.

Any momentum the library might have had is now skewered by these limitations which will surely create demand for more different animation libraries to exist within other walled gardens.

The same happened to Vercel & Next.js which now seems to be powering the return of Vite & CSR.

Now that said, I'd never heard of this library until this announcement, and I don't know much about its role in the javascript ecosystem, but I can't say that the trend towards M&A kingdoms in the open source community delights me.

johncoltrane · 8h ago
FWIW, sub-5kb banners were probably the only Flash projects that didn't include GSAP before we collectively jumped ships to JavaScript and CSS for animation on the web. It was everywhere.
anon7000 · 7h ago
I mean, don’t framer and figma also have loads and loads of features which you can’t import into other tools?
robertoandred · 7h ago
GSAP is already a standard and Next has always done CSR.
xnx · 9h ago
Always cool to see more free stuff, but about the only animations I want to see on the web are from https://ciechanow.ski/
dleeftink · 8h ago
It's not just for Web though, but a really nice approach to authoring motion graphics in general. Motioncanvas is also worth a mention in this space[0].

[0]: https://motioncanvas.io/

tanepiper · 2h ago
Nice development for the library, I've been using it in https://teskooano.space for ThreeJS camera transition - I'll have to check out this new stuff too
icemelt8 · 5h ago
Who here is old enough to know that Greensock was actually a flash library?
kabes · 1h ago
Thanks for reminding me I'm getting old
nikisweeting · 3h ago
We loved GSAP and wanted to combine that style of rendering with an event-driven programming model with redux so that we could pass animation events from a backend over a websocket.

Also wanted to keep a bunch of animations on different computers around the world in sync to within ~30ms. Ended up building this library: https://monadical-sas.github.io/redux-time/

exiguus · 2h ago
Beside it's not MIT, so no one will use it. Who is using it? Last time i looked it up, it was like jQuery for animtion. What do i miss about it? Why should i use it?
low_tech_punk · 7h ago
I hope this is a reaction to Framer's rapid development in Frame Motion (https://motion.dev/). Webflow and Framer are competing as site builders, so giving the animation library to everyone is like Meta giving out React.
ayhanfuat · 7h ago
I’d say it is too little too late. Motion already has the lion’s share and anime.js is another strong open source alternative. GSAP was quite big in its day but why would anyone invest in it today? Also Motion is no longer part of Framer.
Zekio · 12h ago
not often you see an acquisition result in something good for existing users, and this is a surprisingly good outcome
irq-1 · 6h ago
satvikpendem · 4h ago
Rive is better in my experience, much more performant and a nice editor to go along with it.
kotg · 5h ago
Lottie handles a different usecase. Lottie is used to port animations from after effects to the web as an svg animation. For this Lottie will use a static json file which is generated beforehand. It uses a quite complex structure and is mere impossible to read as a human. Making dynamic manipulations not feasible.

For dynamic animations gasp is great as you just code the animation in js making it a perfect fit for the web. The creation process can be quite cumbersome though.

pier25 · 7h ago
Amazing how far TweeLite has come. It was probably my most used dependency in Flash projects back in the day.

Jack, if you're reading, I'm sorry I made fun of the green sock brand back in the Kirupa days!

(GS in GSAP stands for Green Sock)

kbaker · 8h ago
GSAP – A wildly robust JavaScript animation library built for professionals [https://gsap.com]
XCSme · 8h ago
I keep hearing about it, but I've never used it. Why would I use it over https://animejs.com ?
ZachSaucier · 6h ago
GSAP is a bit more robust than anime.js. Over the years anime has been adding more functionality and changing its syntax to be more like GSAP's. They're both solid libraries though
Eric_WVGG · 7h ago
I only discovered GSAP the other week, very quickly solved a complex animation problem and walked away quite impressed.

Now I'm looking at AnimeJS and my mind is properly blown, looks even better.

saelthavron · 7h ago
Serious question, is this a joke? I just see a black screen when I go to the site. I refreshed multiple times. Cleared cache. Just a black screen.
moritzruth · 7h ago
You have probably disabled WebGL in your browser.
rtcode_io · 6h ago
Yeah, no! GSAP is not open-source → they can pull the rag on you anytime. No need for drama when we can find/generate alternatives.
peteforde · 2h ago
You're free to use/do as you wish, but GSAP is a remarkably powerful library that benefits from two decades of very smart people optimizing it.

It's very typical for someone to look at something that is only 95% perfect and declare that they could replace it in a few days or weeks, while simply refusing to learn from history (or Joel Spolsky's warnings against the big rewrite).

azemetre · 1h ago
No. As an industry we need to start consolidating on open source tooling, we see what happens when a company breaks away from open source licenses: it hurts consumers at their detriment.

Your quote has no bearing in this context. We aren't talking about rewriting our projects, we're talking about purposely choosing open and free tools.

Also GSAP isn't even the leading animation library in JS ecosystem, thankfully.

EGreg · 3h ago
Strange announcement

Wasn’t GSAP already free and open source? I remember seeing it years ago!

Is this more capitalism doublespeak?

peteforde · 2h ago
GSAP has long had a free base library with many advanced features only available on a paid subscription basis.

While free as in beer is welcome, in a past life I was happy to pay to be able to access such a powerful toolkit.