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Lovable launches mobile app for building websites on the go

Lovable launches mobile app for building websites on the go

Thu, 30th Apr 2026 (Today)
Mark Tarre
MARK TARRE News Chief

Lovable has launched a mobile app for iOS and Android, bringing its app-building product to smartphones.

The app lets users start projects on a computer and continue working on them from a phone. Users can submit prompts by voice or text, receive alerts when a build is ready for review, and switch between mobile and desktop without losing progress.

Lovable's product is aimed at people who want to create web apps and websites by describing what they want in plain language. It can also take a screenshot as input and generate a working app with design, logic and backend elements.

The mobile launch extends that workflow beyond the desk. The app is aimed at founders, designers, product managers and people without coding experience who want to prototype, test layouts or create software from a handset.

Mobile workflow

Users can queue multiple prompts while on the move and let the system continue building and testing in the background. The app then sends a notification when the result is ready to inspect.

Cross-device use is central to the launch. A project started on a laptop can be resumed on a sofa or while travelling, with work carried over between devices.

Broader platform

Lovable says its wider platform is used to build web apps and mobile apps, websites and landing pages, internal tools and dashboards, software-as-a-service products, marketplaces and custom team tools. Users can refine projects through chat-based prompts, add features, adjust layouts and connect services such as payment systems before deploying the finished product.

The platform also integrates with tools including Stripe, GitHub, Notion, Shopify and Slack. Authentication, database and hosting are included from the start.

Lovable positions the service as a way for non-technical users to build software without writing code or hiring developers. It says founders have used the platform to launch businesses, marketing teams have produced websites more quickly, and product managers have brought working prototypes to meetings.

More than 25 million projects have been built on the platform, according to the company. The mobile app is part of an effort to make that process available in shorter bursts of work and in settings where ideas are captured away from a desk.