Skip to content

ABC Tool

  • Home
  • About / Contect
    • PRIVACY POLICY
Lovable says it has hit 0M in annualized revenue, with 1 million new projects a week

Lovable says it has hit $500M in annualized revenue, with 1 million new projects a week

Posted on June 9, 2026 By safdargal12 No Comments on Lovable says it has hit $500M in annualized revenue, with 1 million new projects a week
Blog


Europe’s fast-growing vibe coding startup, Lovable, tells TechCrunch it has surpassed $500 million in annualized revenue run rate.

Lovable last discussed its revenue in February, when the company said it crossed $400 million. In August, 2024, Lovable said it could hit $1 billion in annualized revenue within 12 months. It may not be on track to double that figure by summer, but it is still reporting jaw-dropping growth; the company, founded in late 2023, hasn’t yet hit its three-year anniversary.

The company also claims it has been used to build over 50 million projects and says usage has accelerated to one million new projects a week. According to a survey of those projects that run on the company’s blog, Lovable says its users are primarily non-technical, yet are increasingly building software they intend to monetize or use in their businesses.

Its users are founders, designers, and salespeople building websites and e-commerce storefronts, as well as internal tools like CRMs, inventory systems, and HR platforms, the company says.

That list tells a story. AI vibe coding platforms have been seen as a threat to legacy SaaS software. Why buy expensive annual contracts when you can just vibe code it yourself? Lovable’s survey appears to offer some data that this is indeed happening. Of course, Lovable — therefore most of the projects built on it — isn’t old enough to answer the harder question about vibe-coded software: will such an approach prove short-lived? That’s because it’s not the initial building part that’s the problem — it’s the maintaining part.

Software operates almost like a living organism: even well-written, well-designed code that isn’t AI slop runs atop an ever-shifting stack of dependencies, third-party services, and infrastructure — all of which is constantly being updated, which means end-user software is always breaking. That’s why so many companies choose to buy instead of build. They want others to be responsible for keeping it running. We’ll have to see if Lovable and other vibe coders will transparently report abandoned projects as their platforms mature — aka the not-as-flattering stuff. If those abandonment rates are low, that will be the true indication that the so-called SaaSpocalypse is here and here to stay.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.



Source link

Post Views: 2

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: New leak puts the Redmi K100 Pro battery at 8,000mAh (or higher)
Next Post: Apple’s Cautious AI Strategy Could Have Been Its Smartest Move ❯

You may also like

Blue Origin’s New Glenn explosion is a setback for NASA’s Moon plans
Blog
Blue Origin’s New Glenn explosion is a setback for NASA’s Moon plans
May 29, 2026
Many readers recommend NextDNS, but few bother using it
Blog
Many readers recommend NextDNS, but few bother using it
May 16, 2026
Kalshi doubles valuation in 5 months, hitting  billion
Blog
Kalshi doubles valuation in 5 months, hitting $22 billion
May 7, 2026
A new leak reveals Samsung Galaxy S27 Pro battery details
Blog
A new leak reveals Samsung Galaxy S27 Pro battery details
June 9, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Samsung Galaxy Z Flip8 will use the Exynos 2600 in these regions
  • 6 iOS 27 features Android needs to copy immediately
  • Popular Wildfire App Watch Duty Expands to Cover Floods Nationwide
  • Apple’s iOS 27 copies a classic Android feature: Extra large widgets
  • The fastest humans in the galaxy just got a spiffy patch to prove it

Recent Comments

  1. Last Chance for Big Savings on TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 Tickets – Artiverse on 5 days left: Save up to $410 on Disrupt 2026 passes

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026

Categories

  • Blog

Copyright © 2026 ABC Tool.

Theme: Oceanly News by ScriptsTown