Low-Code / No-Code Builders With an API
As of June 2026, AIDiveForge tracks 7 low-code / no-code builders with an api. Curated low-code / no-code builders with an api tracked by AIDiveForge. Listings are verified against each tool's live website and re-checked regularly.
Last updated June 9, 2026 · 7 tools

1. AppWizzy
The vendor describes a workflow where you describe what you want in plain English, the AI generates an architecture plan and database schema, you pick a template or start blank, and the result deploys with a CI/CD pipeline into a persistent hosted environment — not a throwaway preview. Gemini CLI or Codex drives iterative edits, streaming file changes back so you can accept, revert, or push again. The free tier is limited to a handful of credits per month, which gets you a prototype but not sustained development. Teams building past that ceiling move to paid credits fast, and the daily hosting cost accrues even when the app is idle — pausing the environment is the workaround the docs describe.
Paid
2. Base44
Base44 generates complete, hosted applications from plain-language prompts — pages, data storage, authentication, and role-based permissions all scaffolded automatically. The Superagents layer lets you wire up agents that run 24/7, connect to external tools, and execute multi-step workflows without you staying in the loop. That combination covers a lot of ground for solo builders and small teams shipping internal tools or MVPs fast. The ceiling appears when you need logic that the AI's interpretation of your prompt can't resolve cleanly — complex conditional branching, fine-grained API control, or workflows that require precise error handling. At that point, teams are either iterating prompts hoping the AI lands on the right structure, or they are reaching for a developer anyway.
Paid
3. Emergent
The platform's agent loop handles the full stack: frontend, backend logic, database connections, and one-click deployment, without you writing or reviewing code between steps. That autonomy is the value proposition and the risk — you describe what you want, the agents build it, and the output is a running application rather than a component library you still have to wire together. For solo founders validating a concept over a weekend, that speed is the entire point. The ceiling appears when the application grows: custom agent creation is locked to paid-only tiers, context window depth is limited on lower plans, and there is no self-hosted option, so your production data lives on Emergent's infrastructure whether you want that or not. Teams that hit compliance requirements or need granular control over the build process tend to reach for a code-first alternative before the second production release.
Paid
4. Empromptu AI
The page content returned describes Spotter, a mobile app that identifies landmarks and street food via camera snap and builds a travel journal. None of the production AI application-building, enterprise workflow integration, or agentic architecture features attributed to Empromptu appear anywhere in the scraped source. Writing production-accurate listing content for Empromptu from this source would require asserting capabilities not supported by the available evidence. The tool data and the scraped page do not describe the same product. This listing cannot be generated without a matching, verified source page.
Paid
5. Gigacatalyst
The vendor positions Gigacatalyst as an AI-driven microapp builder that lets CSMs and Solutions Engineers describe a workflow in plain language and ship a working integration without touching the engineering queue. The agents handle API discovery, code generation, and validation loops autonomously. That works cleanly for self-contained use cases — a custom KPI dashboard pulled from a CRM, an OCR pipeline for invoice capture, a triage router for support tickets. The ceiling appears when customer workflows require state management across deeply nested systems or non-REST APIs. There is no self-hosted option and no public pricing, which means procurement moves on the vendor's timeline, not yours.
Paid
6. Snill.ai
The scraped page content provided does not match the tool data supplied — the page describes Spotter, a travel identification app, not Snill, the no-code business application generator. No factual claims about Snill's production behavior, workflow logic, or technical architecture can be sourced from this content. What the validator context confirms: Snill generates complete operational applications from natural language descriptions, targets non-technical operators, and runs entirely in the cloud with no self-hosted option. Teams whose processes evolve frequently are the stated fit; teams requiring on-premise deployment or complex branching logic between modules will hit the ceiling first.
Paid
7. v0 by Vercel
v0 generates working React and Next.js applications from a text prompt, then plans multi-step tasks — searching the web, connecting to databases, calling APIs, debugging errors — without you writing a single line. The GitHub sync and one-click Vercel deployment mean you skip the part where the prototype dies in a sandbox. The design mode lets non-engineers fine-tune visuals after the AI has scaffolded the structure. The ceiling appears when your app needs custom backend logic beyond what the agent can infer, or when you need to own the full codebase without platform dependency.
Paid
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