Buildy vs Natively

Buildy vs Natively

Natively and Buildy both get an app into the stores, but they do fundamentally different things. Natively (buildnatively.com) is a website-to-app tool: it wraps your website/web app into an iOS/Android app by loading it inside a native WebView, so the shipped app is essentially your live site running inside a native shell, and content updates auto-sync without a resubmit. Buildy is an AI builder that generates a real, native React Native app from a natural-language description, code you own and can export as a zip or sync to your own GitHub. If you already have a polished website and just want it in the stores, that difference is the whole decision.

Buildy compared to Natively
BuildyNatively
Code ownershipFull. Standard Expo/React Native project, exportable as a zip or synced to your own GitHub. No proprietary runtime.None of the app's code. You keep your website, but the app itself is a WebView wrapper and Natively doesn't provide app source code.
Native targetsReal native code: Expo/React Native (default), plus native Android (Kotlin/Compose) and iOS (SwiftUI).WebView wrapper: your live website embedded in a native shell, not native UI or navigation.
Free tierBuild + live preview + install on your phone. No card required.$0 tier converts a site to an app and allows real-device testing, but app-store builds and publishing require a paid plan.
ExportZip download or GitHub sync of the whole project. A working app if you ever leave.No code export. Offers a JS SDK / plugins to add native hooks (push, in-app purchase) to your existing site.
PricingFree; Pro €25/mo; Max €50/mo. Paddle is merchant of record (handles EU VAT).Free $0; Essential ~$19/mo; Unlimited ~$49/mo; one-time Lifetime license ~$699. Annual billing is cheaper, check their site for current numbers.
App Store 2.5.2 / self-containedShipped binary is self-contained native code; the live preview runs on Buildy's servers and is not packaged in the app.App loads your live website at runtime; pure wrappers face Apple's 4.2 'repackaged website' scrutiny. Natively sells approval support + a 100% release guarantee to mitigate.
BackendSupabase wiring on Pro+ (bring your own project); env-var management built in.Uses whatever backend already powers your website; adds native plugins rather than a new backend.
Learning curveDescribe the app in natural language; some technical comfort helps for export and customization.Paste a URL. Easiest path if you already have a polished website; no coding at all.

Where Buildy is the better pick

  • You own real code. Buildy outputs a standard Expo/React Native project you can export as a zip or sync to your own GitHub. Natively gives you a WebView wrapper around your site, not app source you control.

  • It's an actual native app, not your website in a shell. Buildy generates real React Native (plus native Android in Kotlin/Compose and iOS in SwiftUI) with native UI and navigation, instead of embedding your live site in a WebView.

  • Self-contained shipping. Buildy's final binary contains the app's code; the live preview runs on Buildy's servers and is not packaged inside the shipped app. Pure website-wrappers are essentially a browser pointed at a URL and tend to draw Apple's 4.2 'repackaged website' scrutiny.

  • No existing website required. Buildy builds the app from a description; Natively needs a web app to wrap in the first place.

  • No lock-in. Leave Buildy and you still have a working Expo project; leave a wrapper and the 'app' is just your website again.

Where Natively may be the better pick

No tool wins everything. Here's where Natively is genuinely the stronger choice.

  • If you already run a polished web app (Shopify, WordPress, Webflow, Bubble), Natively is the faster, cheaper path to the stores. There's no rebuild, you keep one codebase, and content updates auto-sync to the app without resubmitting.

  • Natively offers a one-time Lifetime license (about $699) plus hands-on App Store approval support and a 100% release guarantee. That's appealing if you want done-for-you publishing and no recurring AI subscription.

  • Single source of truth: web and app stay in sync automatically, so the two never drift apart. With a separate native codebase you have to keep them aligned yourself.

The verdict

Choose by what you're starting from. If you already have a website you love and just want it in the app stores fast and cheap, especially as a one-time purchase, Natively's WebView wrapper is a legitimate, low-effort option, and its hands-on approval support and release guarantee are a genuine perk. Just know what you're shipping: your website in a native shell, with no app source code you own, and a model that draws Apple's "minimum functionality" scrutiny for pure wrappers. Buildy is for people who want an actual app, real React Native (plus native Android/iOS) code you own and can export, a self-contained binary that doesn't depend on loading a live site at runtime, and a free tier that builds and previews on a real phone with no card. Wrap an existing site with Natively; build a real, owned app with Buildy.

Build your first app free →

Two similarly named products exist. This page compares the WebView-wrapper "Natively" at buildnatively.com, which describes itself as converting your website into an iOS/Android app by loading it inside a native WebView. A separate, similarly named product ("Newly," at natively.dev) instead uses AI to generate native React Native code with source ownership, do not confuse the two. Natively's pricing was read from buildnatively.com/pricing in 2026 (Free $0; Essential ~$19/mo, ~$12/mo billed annually; Unlimited ~$49/mo, ~$32/mo billed annually; Lifetime license ~$699), and the Lifetime tier has carried promotional bundle offers, verify current numbers before quoting. Natively's site does not frame its model in terms of Apple guideline 2.5.2 or 4.2; those App Store points are general wrapper-review context. Natively does advertise a "100% app-store release guarantee" plus App Store approval support. Buildy's ~6M/~12M monthly token figures are approximate.