
Lovable Mobile App: Vibe Coding Straight From Your Phone
TL;DR: „Since April 27, Lovable ships as a native app for iOS and Android. Core features: voice/text prompt queue, notifications on build completion, seamless phone ↔ laptop sync. Turns Lovable into truly async tooling – capture ideas as they come, let builds run when you have capacity."
— Till FreitagWhat the app actually does
With the mobile launch on April 27, Lovable is now available as a native app on the App Store and Google Play.
Three core capabilities:
- Queue prompts on the go – voice or text. The agent works through them autonomously, including testing.
- Push notifications when a build is ready. No more tab babysitting.
- Seamless session sync between phone and desktop. Start on the couch, continue at your desk.
Why this is more than "an app version"
The interesting part of the mobile launch isn't the app itself – it's what it says about Lovable's product philosophy: building goes async.
Until now, vibe coding was a synchronous session – open a browser tab, prompt, wait, repeat. With queue + notifications it becomes something closer to Linear or Asana: drop ideas in, the agent works in the background, you review when it suits you.
This sits cleanly next to two other recent launches:
- Skills as reusable instructions → less supervision needed
- Build more. Manage less. update → more autonomous, longer-running tasks
Mobile is the logical next step: if the agent can work autonomously for longer, you no longer need to sit next to it.
Where we use it in daily work
- Idea in a meeting → voice prompt, build runs, demo ready in the afternoon
- Travel / commute → work through a backlog of small UI tweaks
- Late-night ideas → drop them in, sleep, review in the morning
For us as an agency, the mobile app is mostly a response-time lever for client requests – "Can we just see that?" turns into a matter of minutes instead of hours.
What the app does not replace (yet)
Reading code, debugging with DevTools, precise cursor edits, branch management → still desktop. The app is for capturing ideas and triggering builds, not for deep review.






