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2026 Cost Breakdown

How Much Does It Cost to Build a SaaS?

Real 2026 numbers across DIY, no-code, freelance, and agency builds, broken down by line item so you know exactly where the money goes before you spend a dollar.

The Short Answer

Building a SaaS product in 2026 costs anywhere from $500 to $300,000 or more, and the honest answer is: it depends entirely on who builds it. A solo technical founder using a starter kit and AI coding tools can launch a basic MVP for $1,000 to $5,000. A no-code build on Bubble or Softr runs $1,000 to $8,000. Hiring a freelance developer for a proper MVP typically costs $8,000 to $30,000. A dev agency building a fuller v1 usually charges $50,000 to $250,000 or more once you add compliance, integrations, and a polished design.

The number most founders miss is the first-year total. Hosting, third-party tools, payment fees, and maintenance typically add another 40% to 60% on top of the initial build cost, so budget for the whole year, not just the launch.

Cost by Build Approach

How much an MVP and a fuller v1 realistically cost across the four main ways to build a SaaS.

Approach
MVP Cost
Fuller V1 Cost
Timeline
Best For
DIY (solo founder codes it)
$0 to $3,000
$3,000 to $15,000
4 to 12 weeks
Technical founders
No-code (Bubble, Softr, Glide)
$1,000 to $8,000
$8,000 to $25,000
2 to 4 weeks
Non-technical founders validating an idea
Freelance developer(s)
$8,000 to $30,000
$30,000 to $80,000
6 to 10 weeks
Funded founders who need real custom code
Dev agency
$30,000 to $80,000
$80,000 to $250,000+
3 to 6 months
Well-funded teams shipping a serious v1

These ranges assume a standard business SaaS with authentication, a dashboard, and subscription billing. Products with heavy AI features, real-time collaboration, or compliance requirements should budget toward the top of each range, or beyond it.

Line-Item Cost Breakdown

Every founder pays for these categories regardless of which build approach they pick. Only the amount changes.

Design and UI

Wireframes, UI kit, and brand identity. Free with a template if you DIY, or a full custom design system if you hire out.

$0 to $10,000

Development labor

The core build: auth, database, dashboard, billing logic. The single biggest line item on almost every SaaS budget.

$0 to $150,000+

Infrastructure and hosting

Vercel, AWS, Supabase, or Railway. Nearly free at MVP scale, then climbs as users, storage, and background jobs grow.

$0 to $50/mo early, $500 to $3,000+/mo at scale

Third-party tools and APIs

Auth (Clerk, Auth0), payments (Stripe), transactional email (Resend, Postmark), and analytics (PostHog, Plausible).

$0 to $300/mo combined

Domain and SSL

A .com domain plus SSL, which is bundled free with almost every modern host. The cheapest line item on this whole page.

$10 to $20/year

Ongoing maintenance

Bug fixes, dependency updates, and small feature work after launch. Budget this every year, not just at build time.

15% to 25% of build cost annually

Build Timelines by Approach

How long each approach realistically takes from a standing start to a working product in front of real users.

Stage 1: 2 to 4 weeks

No-code MVP

  • Pick a no-code stack (Bubble, Softr, or Glide plus Stripe)
  • Build core screens and a single working feature loop
  • Skip custom design, use a template
  • Launch to a small waitlist for feedback
Stage 2: 6 to 10 weeks

Freelance-built lean MVP

  • Scope a lean feature set with one or two freelance developers
  • Add real authentication, billing, and an admin panel
  • Ship on a modern stack such as Next.js and Supabase
  • Run a private beta with your first paying customers
Stage 3: 3 to 6 months

Agency-built full v1

  • Full discovery and scoping phase with a dev agency
  • Production-grade design system and QA pass
  • Role-based access, integrations, and a proper onboarding flow
  • Public launch with support and monitoring in place
Stage 4: 6 to 12+ months

Enterprise-grade platform

  • SOC 2 or HIPAA compliance work alongside the build
  • Multi-tenancy, multi-region infrastructure, and audit logging
  • Dedicated in-house or hybrid team for continuous iteration
  • Enterprise sales support: SSO, custom contracts, uptime SLAs

Which Approach Actually Fits You

Use these six questions to pick a build approach instead of guessing. Most founders land on a different answer than they expected once they work through this.

1

How technical are you?

If you can write basic code or are willing to learn, DIY or a low-code tool can save tens of thousands of dollars. If you cannot code and do not want to learn, hire out from day one.

2

What is your real budget?

Under $5,000 pushes you toward no-code or DIY. $10,000 to $50,000 opens up a freelancer. Above $50,000 with a firm deadline, an agency starts to make sense.

3

How urgent is your timeline?

No-code ships in weeks. A freelancer needs a couple of months. An agency needs a quarter or more once you include discovery and QA. Pick the approach that matches how fast you actually need to launch.

4

How complex is the product?

A single-workflow tool fits no-code fine. Anything involving heavy data processing, real-time features, or complex permissions usually needs custom code sooner rather than later.

5

Have you found product-market fit yet?

Before PMF, optimize for speed and cheap iteration, not architecture. No-code or a scrappy DIY build lets you throw away a bad idea without losing much money.

6

Do you have compliance or security requirements?

Handling health data, financial data, or enterprise contracts with security questionnaires usually rules out pure no-code and pushes you toward custom development with a security-aware team.

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Hidden Costs Founders Forget

These rarely show up in a quote, which is exactly why they blow past founders' budgets. Plan for them before you sign anything.

1

Legal basics. Terms of service, a real privacy policy, and a cookie policy. Templates get you started cheap, a lawyer review costs more but protects you before you take payments.

2

Payment processing fees. Stripe and similar processors take roughly 2.9% plus 30 cents per transaction. This is not a one-time cost, it scales with every dollar of revenue forever.

3

Customer support tooling. A shared inbox or helpdesk like Intercom or Crisp once you have real users. Free at first, then $50 to $500+ per month as your team and volume grow.

4

AI or LLM API usage. If your SaaS has any AI feature, OpenAI, Anthropic, or similar API costs scale directly with usage and are easy to underestimate at launch.

5

Data backups and monitoring. Error tracking (Sentry), uptime monitoring, and automated database backups. Cheap individually, but they add up to a real monthly line by the time you are production-ready.

6

Migrating off no-code later. If you outgrow a no-code platform, rebuilding on custom code later can cost more than if you had built custom from the start. Budget for this possibility if you expect fast growth.

7

Scope creep during the build. Adding features mid-build with a freelancer or agency routinely adds 2 to 4 weeks and thousands of dollars per change. Lock your MVP scope before you sign a contract.

A lot of founders also underestimate what it costs to get a product in front of people once it is built. Once you have shipped something real, tools like MediaFast can help you find your first users on Reddit without adding a paid ads line item to your budget.

SaaS Build Costs by the Numbers

A quick-reference set of numbers pulled from the ranges above.

$1K to $300K+

Full realistic range for building a SaaS in 2026, from a starter kit to an enterprise platform

40% to 60%

How much higher your first-year total typically runs above the original build quote

20% to 40%

Extra cost for adding AI or LLM features to an otherwise standard SaaS MVP

2 to 4 weeks

Fastest realistic timeline to a working no-code MVP

9% to 15%

Typical share of build cost eaten by payment processing fees in year one at modest revenue

15% to 25%

Annual maintenance cost as a percentage of the original build cost

When It's Worth Paying More

Cheap is not always right. If you already have paying customers or a signed pilot, an underbuilt product costs you more in churn and support headaches than a proper build would have cost upfront. The same is true if your product touches sensitive data such as health records or payments infrastructure. Skimping on security review there is a business risk, not a savings.

It is also worth paying more once you know your core workflow is validated and you are optimizing for retention rather than testing an idea. A rebuild from no-code to custom code at that stage is more expensive than building it properly the second time, so it is often cheaper long-term to invest in a freelancer or agency once demand is proven.

If you are still testing whether anyone wants this at all, do the opposite. Spend the least amount of money and time possible to get a real answer. No-code or a scrappy DIY build is the right call until you have evidence worth protecting.

Build Cost Glossary

Six terms worth knowing before you get a quote from a freelancer or agency.

MVP

Minimum Viable Product. The smallest version of your SaaS that lets real users complete the core workflow, built to test demand before you invest in a fuller product.

No-code

Building an app using visual tools like Bubble, Softr, or Glide instead of writing code by hand. Fastest and cheapest way to test an idea, but harder to customize at scale.

Technical debt

Shortcuts taken to ship faster that cost more to fix later. Common in rushed no-code or freelancer builds when nobody plans for what happens after the MVP works.

Managed hosting

Infrastructure providers like Vercel, Railway, or Supabase that handle servers, scaling, and backups for you, versus running your own servers on raw AWS or a VPS.

Vibe coding

Using AI coding assistants to generate most of an app's code from natural-language prompts. Increasingly common in 2026 and a major reason DIY and freelancer costs have dropped.

Runway

How many months your current cash covers your expenses. A key input into whether you can afford a $50,000 agency build or need to start leaner.

Budget Mistakes vs. Smart Moves

Smart Moves

Scope a real MVP before requesting quotes

Budget the first-year total, not just the build

Start with the cheapest approach that proves demand

Get a fixed-scope quote in writing before work starts

Ask any agency for references from a similar build

Keep a 20% buffer for scope changes

Budget Mistakes

Hiring an agency before validating the idea at all

Ignoring monthly infrastructure and tool costs

Adding features mid-build without a new quote

Skipping legal basics like a real privacy policy

Underestimating payment processing fees at scale

Choosing a build partner on price alone

Who Each Path Is Really For

A quick gut-check before you commit budget to any single approach.

DIY

You can code, or you are willing to learn with AI tools, and time matters more than money right now.

No-code

You need to validate demand fast on a tight budget and your workflow is not deeply custom.

Freelancer

You have some funding, a validated idea, and need real custom code without agency overhead.

Agency

You have real budget, a firm deadline, and need a team that can also support you post-launch.

Related Founder Guides

Once your budget is set, these guides help you price it, launch it, and market it.

SaaS Build Cost FAQ

Common questions founders ask before they get a quote.

Most SaaS products cost between $1,000 and $250,000 to build, depending on approach. A no-code MVP built solo runs $1,000 to $8,000. A freelance-built MVP typically costs $8,000 to $30,000. A dev agency building a fuller v1 usually charges $50,000 to $250,000 or more, especially with compliance or enterprise requirements involved.

No-code is almost always cheaper upfront, typically $1,000 to $8,000 versus $8,000 to $30,000 for a freelance developer. The tradeoff is flexibility. No-code tools like Bubble or Softr are faster to launch but harder to customize deeply, and can become more expensive to migrate away from later if your product outgrows the platform.

Yes. A technical founder using a starter kit, AI coding tools, and free-tier infrastructure like Vercel and Supabase can realistically launch a basic MVP for $500 to $5,000, mostly covering domain, a starter kit or template, and small third-party tool bills. This works best for simple, single-workflow products.

Ongoing costs after launch surprise most founders more than the build itself. Payment processing fees, customer support tooling, AI API usage, monitoring, and maintenance typically push your real first-year total 40% to 60% above the original build quote. Budget for the full year, not just the initial build.

A freelancer or small freelance team is usually more cost-effective for a lean MVP, running $8,000 to $30,000 versus an agency's $30,000 to $80,000+ for the same scope. Agencies make more sense once you need project management, QA processes, and a team that can scale with you past the MVP stage.

Plan on 15% to 25% of your original build cost every year for bug fixes, dependency updates, and small improvements. On top of that, infrastructure and third-party tool costs scale with usage, often adding another $50 to $3,000+ per month depending on how many users you have.