Most software firms need ten years to reach $500 million in sales. Lovable says it got there before its third birthday.
The European startup lets you build apps in a new way. You just type what you want in plain English.
It now runs at a $500 million yearly pace.
From $400 Million To $500 Million
Lovable crossed $400 million in February. It says it is now past $500 million.
That jump came in just a few months. The firm last gave a sales figure back in February.
This typing-to-build approach is called vibe coding. You describe the app you want, and the AI writes the code for you.
The $500 million figure is a run rate. That takes recent sales and stretches them across a year.
So it shows current speed, not cash already in the bank.
Use is climbing fast too. People have built more than 50 million projects on Lovable.
New ones now show up at about a million a week.
The firm was founded in late 2023, and it isn't three years old yet. That makes the pace rare.
It has even floated $1 billion a year as a goal. It isn't there yet.
But the climb has been steep.
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A Problem For Software Stocks?
Here's why investors should care. Most of Lovable's users aren't coders.
They are founders, designers, and sales reps. They build the tools firms usually buy.
Some make websites and online stores. Others build apps to track stock or pay staff.
A few even build their own customer databases. These aren't toy apps.
Many of them run real businesses.
Many want to make money from what they build. So this isn't just for fun.
Lovable says its users skew non-technical. They lean on the AI to do the coding.
This is the fear hanging over old-school SaaS. SaaS is software you rent through a yearly plan.
If you can build your own customer app in an afternoon, why pay for one?
Lovable's own survey suggests that shift has started. And big software sellers make most of their money on those yearly plans.
That income is exactly what's at risk.
What To Watch
Building software is the easy part. Keeping it running is the hard part.
Apps sit on top of code and services that change all the time. So they break.
That's a big reason firms pay someone else to keep their software working.
Lovable is too young to know one key number. How many of its 50 million projects get dumped once they break?
The drop-off rate nobody reports yet will tell the real story. Either this is a true threat to software firms, or it's just a fast start.
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