Lovable (company)

Swedish vibe coding platform and company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lovable is a Swedish vibe coding platform and company. Founded in Stockholm in 2023. It provides software that allows users to enter prompts to automate software development.

Company type
Private
IndustrySoftware
Founded2023; 3 years ago (2023) in Stockholm, Sweden
Founders
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Lovable Labs Incorporated
Company type
Private
IndustrySoftware
Founded2023; 3 years ago (2023) in Stockholm, Sweden
Founders
Headquarters
Stockholm
,
Sweden[1]
Key people
  • Anton Osika (CEO)
  • Fabian Hedin (CTO)
Number of employees
120 (2025)[1]
Websitelovable.dev
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History

In 2023, Anton Osika developed "GPT Engineer", an open-source software that used large language models to code software applications. With Fabian Hedin, the pair then developed "GPT Engineer App" a commercialized version of GPT Engineer. In December 2024, Osika and Hedin renamed the app Lovable before launching open access.[2][3]

Funding

In February 2025, Lovable raised a $200 million Series A led by Accel at a $1.8 billion valuation making it one of the fastest growing technology companies in Europe.[4][5]

In November 2025, Bloomberg reported that Lovable said it had reached $200 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR), and that it was close to raising new funding that would value the company above $6 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter.[6]

In December 2025, Lovable raised $330 million in a Series B funding round led by CapitalG and Menlo Ventures at a $6.6 billion valuation. Khosla Ventures, Salesforce Ventures, and Databricks Ventures also participated, among other investors.[7]

Security

In March 2025, a Replit employee discovered a security vulnerability in websites created with Lovable. The platform allows websites to connect to the Supabase database platform. Many websites did not correctly configure access controls for their database, which made their contents public. Lovable responded by automatically checking websites for access controls, but this scan did not determine whether the access controls were correct or not.[8]

Awards

In 2025, Anton Osika and Fabian Hedin received the KTH Innovation Award[9], an award funded by KTH Royal Institute of Technology, with donations from Mathias Uhlén, professor at KTH and Spotify founder Daniel Ek.

References

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