Bolt.new vs Lovable: Which AI Builder Actually Ships? (2026)
Both Bolt.new and Lovable generate web apps fast. Neither ships native mobile apps. Honest comparison from someone who tested both and built an alternative.
Both Bolt.new and Lovable generate web apps fast. Neither ships native mobile apps. Honest comparison from someone who tested both and built an alternative.
Comparison
Bolt.new and Lovable compared. Both generate web apps. Neither ships to the App Store.
I spent a week testing both Bolt.new and Lovable for building mobile apps. Here's what happened: both are impressive for web apps. Neither can ship a native app to the App Store.
That's not a criticism. They're web tools. But if you need a native iOS or Android app, you need to know this upfront.
| Capability | Bolt.new | Lovable |
|---|---|---|
| Web app generation | Yes | Yes |
| Mobile app (native) | No | No |
| App Store submission | No | No |
| Backend API | Limited | Supabase |
| In-app purchases | No | No |
| Push notifications | No | No |
| Code ownership | Export | Export |
| Pricing model | Token-based | Credit-based |
Both use consumption-based pricing. The more you iterate, the more you pay. I've seen reports of developers spending $200-500/month just on iteration.
With exported code, you own the output. But the generation process itself is a recurring cost.
Both tools are excellent at getting to 70% of a working app. The last 30% — edge cases, production hardening, real-world data handling — still requires manual work. This is a common pattern in AI-generated code.
Use Bolt.new when:
Use Lovable when:
Use neither when:
I wanted native mobile apps on the App Store. Not web wrappers, not PWAs — actual native apps that Apple and Google review and list.
So I built a system for that. Different tool, different problem.
AI App Factory gives you a proven stack. React Native + NestJS + Supabase + 11 AI agents. One-time purchase.