
Sketchflow is an all-in-one app builder that uses artificial intelligence to generate real native mobile code in Kotlin for Android and Swift for iOS, as well as React.js for web applications. It is designed for product designers, indie developers, and startup teams who want to ship working apps quickly without getting bogged down by manual coding and design friction. The core value proposition is the ability to go from a simple text description or uploaded image to a fully editable design and then to production-ready code that you own. Sketchflow streamlines the entire product design journey by combining AI-powered design generation with a one-click native code generator and a cloud-based simulator for testing.
Traditional app development often involves a slow, fragmented process where designers create mockups in one tool, developers manually translate them into code, and iterations take days or weeks. This leads to miscommunication, delayed launches, and high costs, especially for teams without dedicated mobile engineers. Sketchflow solves this by allowing users to generate visible, interactive UX directly from their ideas, bridge the gap between design and development, and own the resulting stable code. For founders trying to validate an MVP, agencies delivering client projects, or product teams iterating on features, this eliminates the handoff bottleneck and reduces time-to-market dramatically.
The first major feature group is the Native Code Generator, which enables one-click generation of native Android code in Kotlin and native iOS code in Swift, plus React.js for web apps. Users simply design their interface in Sketchflow's visual editor, then click a button to obtain clean, structured code files. This feature works with a built-in cloud simulator called Simulation Run, where you can visually demonstrate your working app from the generated code within a tailored execution environment. The benefit is that you do not need to write boilerplate or struggle with platform-specific syntax; the AI handles conversion while preserving your design intent.
The second major feature group centers on AI-powered design creation through two distinct workflows: Blueprint and SnapDesign. Blueprint lets you describe your app idea in text, and the AI automatically generates complete flows, pages, and designs. SnapDesign allows you to upload an existing image or screenshot, and the AI transforms it into an editable design layout. Both outputs can be further refined using Sketchflow's flexible visual editor, where you can adjust colors, fonts, spacing, and more with precision. This empowers users to start from any asset—a napkin sketch, a competitor screenshot, or a written brief—and rapidly iterate.
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Additional capabilities include a rich visual editor with features like AI Regeneration for individual pages, precise editing tools to adjust every detail, and the ability to choose or describe your style to apply instant themes. The platform also offers interactive demo previews and effortless export for team collaboration, allowing stakeholders to experience the app before code generation. Sketchflow provides pre-built templates in its Library, such as an AI business analysis platform, a retail inventory system, a home decoration guide, a mental health journal app, and a CRM prototype, which can be customized for faster starts.
The overall workflow begins by selecting a creation method: enter a text description via Blueprint or upload an image via SnapDesign. The AI then generates a complete set of flows, pages, and a high-fidelity design. Users can edit the design with the visual editor, adjust styles, and preview interactions. Once the design is finalized, they click the code generator to produce Kotlin, Swift, or React.js code. They can then test the app in the cloud simulator to ensure functionality. The final code is downloadable and owned by the user, with no lock-in or platform dependency.
Concrete use cases include building a mental health journaling app (Mind Bloom template) where the AI generates mood tracking pages and note-taking flows, which are then converted into a native iOS app using Swift. Another scenario is designing a CRM system (Sales Pilot template) for a sales team, with screens for leads, pipeline, and analytics, then exporting as React.js for a web dashboard. A designer might upload a screenshot of a competitor's app and use SnapDesign to create a similar UI, then generate Android Kotlin code for a prototype. In each case, the outcome is a working app that looks like the design and runs on real devices, all without writing code manually.
Sketchflow targets product designers, indie developers, startup founders, UX professionals, and digital agencies who need to ship apps quickly across multiple platforms. The platform supports web (responsive websites), mobile (iOS and Android native apps), desktop, and tablet interfaces. The tech stack relies on AI for design generation and code conversion, plus a cloud simulator for testing. Pricing details are available on the site, with a free tier to start (Start free). Overall, Sketchflow positions itself as the all-in-one app builder for people who actually ship, delivering visible UX and ownable native code from a single workflow.
Product designers seeking rapid prototyping, indie developers who want to ship apps without hiring extra engineers, startup founders validating MVPs across Android and iOS, UX professionals needing to hand off interactive designs, and digital agencies delivering client projects with faster turnaround. The platform also suits product managers who want to see working apps from wireframes, and teams collaborating on responsive web, mobile, tablet, or desktop interfaces.