About

Small software, for the people in your life.

Hatchable is where anyone builds software with an AI agent and shares it with their people — a family, a team, a book club, a D&D group, the whole internet.

Why Hatchable exists

AI can now write working software. That's genuinely new. But the platforms wrapped around the new AI tools are mostly pointed at professional developers building commercial products — they bundle in their own AI, charge twice, and lock you into their workflow.

We think the more interesting thing is the long tail. A parent building a chore tracker their kids actually use. A small team with a spreadsheet that should've been an app two years ago. A freelancer replacing a clunky client intake form over lunch. A D&D group that wants a real campaign manager, not another Notion page.

These people don't need a SaaS product. They need a place to host the small thing they just described to their AI, for free, without learning how containers work. That's what Hatchable is.

What we believe

Personal is not a smaller version of business

Software for your family doesn't need to feel like software for a Fortune 500. It can be smaller, friendlier, closer to the people using it. We're not building Salesforce for your kitchen.

Don't pay twice for your AI

If you already have Claude, Cursor, Copilot, or Codex, you shouldn't have to pay another $30/mo for someone else's AI just to host the things you build. Bring your own. Build as much as you want.

Your code and data are yours

Everything Hatchable runs on is a boring standard: SQL databases, SMTP, object storage, plain HTTP. There's nothing proprietary to leave. You can export everything and take it with you whenever you want.

Sharing is the point

An app nobody uses isn't an app. Invites are free, unlimited, and built into every project. If the people you care about can't sign in and use the thing you made, we've failed.

Get in touch

We're a small team. We answer email. If you've built something interesting, are stuck on something frustrating, or just want to tell us we're wrong about something — we'd like to hear from you.