Vibe coding seems to be everywhere right now, people are building apps just by prompting AI.
But I’m curious if anyone here has actually made money from something they vibe coded, especially people who didn’t come from a coding background.
Would love to hear if there are any real stories.
69 views
Replies
Best
Vibe coding may not able to provide direct money, but it's a better way to build fast, small product features, and building lead magnet tools is very easy with vibe coding. I even built product with it; it will be launching soon!
I’m living this story right now! As a non-technical founder, I’ve spent the last few months 'vibe coding' my way to building a full desktop workspace for writers (Gridance Studio). I’m launching on March 24th with a paid model, and what I’ve realized is that vibe coding shifts the focus from 'how to build' to 'what to build.' It’s definitely becoming a real path for non-devs to create actual income-generating products. The 'vibe' is becoming a business!
@linapok It’s amazing how building products is becoming easier than ever for non-devs and the shift in perspective is something that i love!
You might also find this interesting: we recently launched a marketplace where people can build and sell their digital products directly - https://greta.questera.ai/marketplace
Excited to see Gridance Studio launch. Best of luck on March 24! 🚀
Report
@hiteshi_soni Thanks for sharing! Greta looks like a great platform for digital products—I’ll definitely check it out. Regarding the launch, I’ve actually moved the date to April 21st. I decided to take a few more weeks to really polish the 'deep flow' experience for writers. I want to make sure the 'vibe' is perfect for day one! 😂 Appreciate the support! 🚀
Report
I actually make a living as a developer and vibe coding is becoming a part of my job everyday more and more. But what I find interesting is that local businesses with no coding background are already using it to increase their revenue, through automations or website features that help them outrank competitors.
So, for me, vibe coding isn't just a tool for building a SaaS from scratch: it's just as valuable for improving one that already exists.
@wakkos Congrats, that sounds awesome! And that’s a great perspective too.
I’m also wondering if this could open up a small ecosystem where people build and sell small ready-made tools or automations that businesses can just plug into their sites & use internally?
What do you think about the potential there?
Report
I think it can, but only if it solves a real problem.
Vibe coding makes it much easier to build something quickly, even without a coding background. But the income usually doesn’t come from the code itself, it comes from whether the product is useful enough for people to pay for it.
Most successful examples I’ve seen are small tools, niche SaaS, or simple apps built fast and validated quickly. AI just lowers the barrier to build, but distribution and solving a real problem still matter the most.
@alpertayfurr Yeah that makes a lot of sense, solving a real problem with a quality product will always matter whether its vibe coded or not.
I’m curious about something slightly different too. Do you think there’s potential in things like selling landing pages templates, smaller plugins, or themes like Shopify built through vibe coding?
Tools like Framer have shown people can make decent income selling templates and design assets. I wonder if vibe coding could enable something similar but for small apps or micro-tools.
Replies
Vibe coding may not able to provide direct money, but it's a better way to build fast, small product features, and building lead magnet tools is very easy with vibe coding. I even built product with it; it will be launching soon!
Greta
@sanath_bhat Sounds like a plan! Where will you be launching your product?
@hiteshi_soni it will be in PH soon
I’m living this story right now! As a non-technical founder, I’ve spent the last few months 'vibe coding' my way to building a full desktop workspace for writers (Gridance Studio). I’m launching on March 24th with a paid model, and what I’ve realized is that vibe coding shifts the focus from 'how to build' to 'what to build.' It’s definitely becoming a real path for non-devs to create actual income-generating products. The 'vibe' is becoming a business!
Greta
@linapok It’s amazing how building products is becoming easier than ever for non-devs and the shift in perspective is something that i love!
You might also find this interesting: we recently launched a marketplace where people can build and sell their digital products directly - https://greta.questera.ai/marketplace
Excited to see Gridance Studio launch. Best of luck on March 24! 🚀
@hiteshi_soni Thanks for sharing! Greta looks like a great platform for digital products—I’ll definitely check it out. Regarding the launch, I’ve actually moved the date to April 21st. I decided to take a few more weeks to really polish the 'deep flow' experience for writers. I want to make sure the 'vibe' is perfect for day one! 😂 Appreciate the support! 🚀
I actually make a living as a developer and vibe coding is becoming a part of my job everyday more and more. But what I find interesting is that local businesses with no coding background are already using it to increase their revenue, through automations or website features that help them outrank competitors.
So, for me, vibe coding isn't just a tool for building a SaaS from scratch: it's just as valuable for improving one that already exists.
Greta
@wakkos Congrats, that sounds awesome! And that’s a great perspective too.
I’m also wondering if this could open up a small ecosystem where people build and sell small ready-made tools or automations that businesses can just plug into their sites & use internally?
What do you think about the potential there?
I think it can, but only if it solves a real problem.
Vibe coding makes it much easier to build something quickly, even without a coding background. But the income usually doesn’t come from the code itself, it comes from whether the product is useful enough for people to pay for it.
Most successful examples I’ve seen are small tools, niche SaaS, or simple apps built fast and validated quickly. AI just lowers the barrier to build, but distribution and solving a real problem still matter the most.
Greta
@alpertayfurr Yeah that makes a lot of sense, solving a real problem with a quality product will always matter whether its vibe coded or not.
I’m curious about something slightly different too. Do you think there’s potential in things like selling landing pages templates, smaller plugins, or themes like Shopify built through vibe coding?
Tools like Framer have shown people can make decent income selling templates and design assets. I wonder if vibe coding could enable something similar but for small apps or micro-tools.
How big can that market be?