WordPress vs Lovable: which should a business choose?
WordPress (self-hosted) is an open-source platform you fully own and can move between hosting providers. Lovable is an AI-powered builder that generates code from plain-language prompts. WordPress offers greater control, security options, and long-term stability, but requires more technical management. Lovable is faster to launch and cheaper initially, but raises concerns around vendor dependency, ongoing costs, and suitability for business-critical websites. For any website central to your business operations, WordPress remains the more robust and portable choice.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: Why This Decision Matters More Than You Think
- What Is WordPress (Self-Hosted)?
- What Is Lovable?
- Ease of Use: Getting Started vs. Scaling Up
- Ownership, Portability, and Vendor Lock-In
- Security: Who Is Responsible When Something Goes Wrong?
- Long-Term Costs: The Full Picture
- When Lovable Makes Sense — and When It Doesn’t
- Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Next Steps
- Glossary
- Conclusion
1. Introduction: Why This Decision Matters More Than You Think
Your website is not simply an online brochure. For most businesses, it is the first point of contact with potential clients, a platform for booking, selling, and communicating, and increasingly, a critical piece of your digital infrastructure. The platform you choose to build it on determines how much control you retain, how secure it is, how much it will cost you over the long term — and crucially, what happens if you ever want to change direction.
In 2025, a new category of AI-powered website builders emerged into the mainstream. Lovable is one of the most prominent of these tools, promising to generate functional, good-looking websites from simple text prompts in a matter of minutes. The appeal is obvious, particularly for business owners who want to move quickly and keep costs down. The question, however, is not whether Lovable can build you a website. The question is whether it should — especially when that website is central to your business.
This guide will walk you through the key differences between Lovable and self-hosted WordPress. We will cover ease of use, who truly owns the website you have built, what security looks like on each platform, the real costs over time, and the practical risks that many business owners do not discover until it is too late.
By the end, you will have a clear understanding of both platforms — and, we hope, a clearer view of which is the right foundation for your business.
2. What Is WordPress (Self-Hosted)?
WordPress is the world’s most widely used website platform. According to W3Techs, it powers over 43% of all websites on the internet. It is open-source software, which means it is free to use, maintained by a global community of developers, and not owned by any single company.
When we talk about “self-hosted WordPress”, we mean the version available at WordPress.org — the software you download and install on your own chosen hosting server. This is distinct from WordPress.com, which is a hosted service owned by Automattic. Self-hosted WordPress gives you full ownership of your website files, your database, your content, and your data.
What makes self-hosted WordPress stand out for businesses:
- You choose your own hosting provider. You can move your website to a different server at any time.
- You have access to over 60,000 plugins, enabling everything from e-commerce and membership areas to booking systems and CRM integrations.
- You own your data entirely. Your website content, your customer data, your files — all of it lives on infrastructure you control.
- The codebase is transparent and can be inspected, audited, or modified by any developer.
- It is backed by an enormous ecosystem of developers, designers, and agencies worldwide, meaning you are never dependent on a single supplier.
Self-hosted WordPress does require some technical management. You need a hosting plan, a domain name, and someone to keep the software updated and secure. However, as we will explore, this is far less daunting than it sounds, and the trade-off is significant control and long-term stability.
3. What Is Lovable?
Lovable (lovable.dev) is a relatively new AI-powered application builder. You describe what you want your website or web application to do in plain English, and the platform generates the code for you automatically. It is part of a growing category of tools sometimes called “vibe coding” platforms, where the goal is to dramatically reduce the time and technical skill needed to get something online.
Lovable generates websites using a modern tech stack — React on the front end, with backend connectivity through services like Supabase. It allows users to deploy with a single click, connect custom domain names, and iterate on designs through conversational prompts.
The platform offers a free tier with significant limitations, and paid plans priced by a credit system. Credits are consumed each time you generate content, make edits, or ask the AI to fix problems — meaning that the more you build and refine, the more you pay.
What makes Lovable appealing:
- You can go from idea to a live website in minutes, not weeks.
- No coding knowledge is required to get started.
- The output can look polished and professional.
- It is excellent for prototyping and testing ideas quickly.
- Projects can theoretically be exported to GitHub for further development.
However, Lovable is fundamentally different from WordPress in one critical respect: it is a proprietary platform. Your website exists within their system, runs on their infrastructure, and depends entirely on the continued operation and pricing decisions of a single company. That distinction has significant consequences for any business that plans to depend on its website for trading, lead generation, or client communication.
4. Ease of Use: Getting Started vs. Scaling Up
Getting Started
On this front, Lovable wins clearly. You type a description, and within minutes, something that looks like a real website appears. There is no hosting to configure, no plugins to install, and no dashboard to learn. For someone with no technical background who needs to test whether an idea has legs, this is genuinely impressive.
WordPress has a steeper initial learning curve. You need to choose a hosting provider, install WordPress (most hosts offer one-click installers), select a theme, and familiarise yourself with the admin dashboard. This can feel overwhelming to a first-time user, though modern managed WordPress hosts have made the process considerably more accessible than it was a few years ago.
Best practice tip: If ease of initial setup is your primary concern, consider using a managed WordPress host such as Kinsta, WP Engine, or SiteGround. These providers handle the technical setup and maintenance for you, giving you much of the simplicity of a hosted platform without the trade-offs.
Scaling Up
Here is where the comparison shifts. Once you need your website to do more — integrate with your CRM, handle complex booking flows, serve as an e-commerce platform, support multiple team members, or undergo a significant redesign — WordPress scales with you. There are plugins for almost every business function imaginable, and because the codebase is open, any developer in the world can extend it.
With Lovable, growing beyond the basics becomes more complicated. Users frequently report that while initial generation is smooth, adding sophisticated backend features, managing complex logic, or maintaining and updating the site over time becomes increasingly difficult and expensive. The credit-based pricing model means that every iteration — including bug fixes — consumes credits, creating an unpredictable cost base as your needs become more complex.
Best practice tip: Before committing to any platform, write down not just what your website needs to do today, but what you expect it to need to do in two to three years. Then evaluate your platform choice against that future picture, not just the immediate one.
Day-to-Day Content Management
For marketing managers and content teams who need to update pages, publish blog posts, add products, or change images regularly, WordPress is designed for exactly this workflow. Its block-based editor (Gutenberg) is accessible to non-technical users, and the admin interface is mature, well-documented, and familiar to millions of people worldwide.
Lovable, by contrast, is primarily a build tool rather than a content management system. Making ongoing content changes typically means returning to the AI prompt interface and asking it to make adjustments — a workflow that is less intuitive for day-to-day marketing operations than a dedicated CMS.
5. Ownership, Portability, and Vendor Lock-In
This is, arguably, the most important section of this guide for business owners. The question of who truly owns your website — and what happens if the platform you chose changes its terms, increases its prices, or ceases to operate — is one that many businesses do not consider until they face a crisis.
WordPress: You Own Everything
With self-hosted WordPress, you own your website completely. Your files sit on a server you pay for, under a hosting contract with a provider of your choosing. If you are unhappy with your current host, you can migrate your entire website — including all your content, images, and database — to a new host. This process is well-established, well-documented, and supported by an enormous range of migration tools and professional services.
Your WordPress website is a genuine digital asset that you own outright and can transfer freely. This matters enormously for business continuity and long-term planning.
Lovable: A More Complex Picture
Lovable does allow users to export their project code to GitHub, which is a meaningful differentiator compared to many other hosted builders that offer no export functionality at all. In theory, this means you are not entirely locked into the platform.
In practice, however, the situation is more nuanced. The generated code uses a specific tech stack (React, Supabase, and Lovable-specific patterns) that requires developer expertise to interpret, maintain, and deploy independently. If you are not a developer — or do not have one on retainer — that exported code is of limited practical value. You would need to hire a developer to understand it, host it separately, and build a deployment pipeline around it. What looked like a cheap website quickly becomes an expensive migration project.
Furthermore, as a platform that launched relatively recently and operates in a fast-moving market, Lovable carries inherent platform risk. The company is growing rapidly and has attracted attention and investment. However, the AI builder space is competitive and evolving quickly. Businesses that build mission-critical websites on early-stage platforms should be aware that pricing models can change, features can be deprecated, and — in the most extreme scenario — platforms can cease to operate. Vendor lock-in, in its most damaging form, is when you cannot easily leave even if you want to.
Best practice tip: Before building anything business-critical on a hosted platform, ask: “If this company doubled its prices tomorrow, or shut down, what would happen to my website?” If the honest answer is “I would be in serious trouble,” that is a warning sign worth heeding.
The Portability Test
A useful way to think about any website platform is to ask what we call the portability test. Could you, with reasonable effort and cost, move your website to a different platform or host within a working week if you needed to?
For a self-hosted WordPress site: yes, definitively. This is a routine operation, and we’ve often helped businesses move to – or away from – us within a matter of days.
For a Lovable-built site: possibly, but it would require developer involvement, meaningful cost, and significant effort. The exported code is not a plug-and-play solution for most business owners.
6. Security: Who Is Responsible When Something Goes Wrong?
The WordPress Security Model
WordPress’s ubiquity — powering over 43% of the web — makes it an attractive target for automated attacks. This is simply a consequence of its scale. However, the WordPress security ecosystem is equally large and mature. The WordPress security team releases patches rapidly, and the plugin ecosystem includes powerful, affordable security tools from providers such as Wordfence and Sucuri.
The key point for business owners is that security is a responsibility you share with your hosting provider and, ideally, a WordPress management partner. On a managed WordPress host like WP Engine or Kinsta, many security measures are handled for you automatically: updates, malware scanning, firewall protection, and DDoS mitigation. On a self-managed server, those responsibilities fall to you or whoever you employ to look after the site.
The single most effective security measure for WordPress is also the simplest: keeping the WordPress core, themes, and plugins updated. Outdated software is the primary vector for successful attacks. Good managed hosts automate this entirely. UZURI Digital manages WordPress-based sites for a number of businesses – our system automatically updates WordPress core and plugins with a roll-back function if an update fails. This means that the business-critical sites we host rarely go down. With 24/7 uptime monitoring we are able to act quickly if and when something goes wrong.
Best practice tip: If you are not comfortable managing WordPress security yourself, use a managed WordPress host or appoint a digital agency – such as UZURI Digital – to manage the site on your behalf. The cost of professional management is almost always less than the cost of recovering from a security incident.
The Lovable Security Model
With Lovable, the security of the hosting infrastructure is handled by the platform itself. You are not responsible for server configuration, updates, or firewall rules in the traditional sense. For some business owners, this feels reassuring.
With Lovable, the security of the hosting infrastructure is handled by the platform itself. You are not responsible for server configuration, updates, or firewall rules in the traditional sense. For some business owners, this feels reassuring.
However, there are important caveats. Lovable uses third-party backend services — most notably Supabase for database and authentication — and the security of the full stack depends on the configuration of all these interconnected services. AI-generated code, by its nature, may contain subtle misconfigurations or overlooked security patterns that a human developer would catch during a code review. Users have reported instances where AI-generated backend logic needed professional review and correction before it was suitable for production use.
This is not a theoretical concern. It is a documented, formally classified vulnerability with a publicly assigned CVE number.
A Real and Documented Security Problem: CVE-2025-48757
In May 2025, security researcher Matt Palmer published a formal vulnerability disclosure — CVE-2025-48757 — revealing a systemic security flaw affecting Lovable-built applications. The vulnerability carries a CVSS severity score of up to 9.3 out of 10, placing it in the critical category.
To understand what went wrong, it helps to know a little about how Lovable works behind the scenes. Lovable connects your website to a database service called Supabase, which stores your data — things like customer details, form submissions, user accounts, and any other information your site collects. Supabase has a security mechanism called Row Level Security (RLS) — essentially a set of rules that control who is allowed to see or change which pieces of data. When these rules are properly configured, only the right people can access the right data. When they are missing or incorrectly set up, the database can be left wide open.
The problem identified in CVE-2025-48757 is that Lovable’s AI frequently generated code without correctly configuring these rules. Because Lovable-built sites communicate directly with Supabase from the user’s browser — using a publicly visible key that is intentionally embedded in the website’s code — an attacker who noticed the absence of proper security rules could query the database directly, without logging in, and extract or manipulate any data stored there.
When security researcher Palmer crawled 1,645 publicly listed Lovable-built applications, he found 170 of them — roughly one in ten — had critical security flaws, with 303 vulnerable database endpoints exposed. The data accessible in those breached apps included names, email addresses, phone numbers, developer API keys, and financial records.
A Real-World Incident: 18,000 People’s Data Exposed
The abstract risk became a concrete reality in February 2026, when security researcher Taimur Khan identified 16 flaws — six of them critical — in a single Lovable-built application that exposed the personal data of more than 18,000 people. The app was designed to manage exam questions and student grades. Because of missing security controls, the AI-generated code had inverted the access logic: it blocked legitimate users whilst allowing unauthenticated attackers to access the entire database, alter grades, delete accounts, and extract administrator email addresses. The full details were reported by The Register on 27 February 2026.
Lovable’s CISO responded to The Register by noting that their free pre-publish security scanner had flagged issues that the app owner chose not to act on. This response, whilst technically fair, illustrates the core problem for non-technical business owners: a platform that relies on the user correctly interpreting and acting on AI-generated security warnings is not a safe default for handling real customer data. Most business owners building a Lovable site are not equipped to evaluate whether a security warning has been adequately addressed.
Lovable’s Response — and Its Limits
Following the public disclosure, Lovable introduced a security scanning feature. However, the scanner only checks whether a Row Level Security policy exists — not whether it actually works correctly or matches the application’s business logic. As the CVE disclosure documentation makes clear, this creates a false sense of security: a site can pass the scanner whilst remaining genuinely vulnerable to data exposure.
Lovable publicly acknowledged the problem, stating that the platform was “not yet where we want to be in terms of security.” Whilst this is a candid admission and the platform has made improvements since, the pattern of vulnerabilities — documented across hundreds of live sites — should give any business owner serious pause before deploying customer-facing functionality on the platform.
A broader scan of over 5,600 AI-built applications conducted by security firm Escape in late 2025 found more than 2,000 vulnerabilities across the category, including over 400 exposed secrets such as API keys and tokens, and 175 instances of exposed personal data including medical records and financial information.
Important note for UK businesses: If your website collects any personal data — including names, email addresses, or payment information — you are subject to UK GDPR. A data breach resulting from inadequate security controls can trigger a legal obligation to notify the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), and in serious cases, financial penalties. The security issues documented above are precisely the kind of misconfiguration that can lead to a reportable breach. Before building any data-collecting functionality on a Lovable-generated site, seek qualified legal and technical advice.
7. Long-Term Costs: The Full Picture
WordPress: Predictable and Scalable
The WordPress software itself is free. Your costs are:
- Hosting: Managed WordPress hosting typically ranges from around £15 to £100 or more per month, depending on your traffic and requirements.
- Premium theme or page builder: A one-off or annual cost, often between £50 and £300.
- Plugins: Many essential plugins are free. Premium plugins for e-commerce, SEO, forms, and security typically cost between £50 and £300 per year each.
- Management and support: If you outsource maintenance to an agency or developer, budget between £50 and £300 or more per month, depending on the scope.
These costs are transparent, predictable, and scalable. As your business grows, you can upgrade your hosting tier, add functionality via plugins, and adjust your support arrangements accordingly.
Lovable: Cheaper at the Start, Less Predictable Over Time
Lovable’s initial cost appears very attractive. The paid plans start at relatively modest monthly fees. For a simple website with limited ongoing changes, costs can remain low.
However, the credit-based model introduces unpredictability. Credits are consumed by every generation, edit, bug fix, and AI query. For an active business website that requires regular updates, seasonal changes, new features, or ongoing optimisation, credit consumption can mount quickly. Users have reported spending significantly more than anticipated when trying to build or refine more complex functionality.
Moreover, Lovable currently relies on third-party infrastructure — notably Supabase for backend services — which may carry its own costs as your data volumes or user numbers grow.
The hidden cost that many business owners underestimate is what happens when the website needs to do something the AI cannot reliably accomplish. At that point, you need to hire a developer to work within Lovable’s generated codebase — which is a specialised skill — or to migrate the site to a different platform entirely. Neither option is cheap.
Best practice tip: When evaluating the cost of any website platform, always model the three-year cost of ownership, not just the cost to launch. Include hosting, updates, security, content changes, feature additions, and the potential cost of migration. The platform with the lowest initial cost is frequently not the most cost-effective over time.
8. When Lovable Makes Sense — and When It Doesn’t
To be fair and balanced: Lovable is a genuinely impressive tool for certain use cases. The AI builder space is moving rapidly, and some of today’s limitations may be addressed in future versions. Here is an honest assessment of where each platform fits.
Lovable Is a Good Fit When:
- You are building a prototype or proof of concept to test an idea before investing in a full build.
- You need a simple marketing landing page with no complex functionality.
- You are a developer who wants to use it as a starting point and export the code to work with in your own environment.
- You are running a short-term campaign that needs a dedicated page quickly and can be retired once the campaign ends.
- You want to explore and experiment without significant upfront investment.
Lovable Is Not a Good Fit When:
- Your website is business-critical — if it goes down or becomes inaccessible, your business suffers immediately.
- You need to process customer data under GDPR or other regulatory frameworks.
- You anticipate significant growth in traffic, functionality, or complexity over the next two to three years.
- You need deep integrations with CRM systems, ERP platforms, booking engines, or payment processors.
- Your team needs to edit content regularly without returning to the AI builder every time.
- You want full ownership of the website as a business asset, with the ability to move it freely.
- You need a transparent audit trail for security and compliance purposes.
Self-Hosted WordPress Is the Better Choice When:
Any of the above conditions apply to your business. WordPress has been the backbone of serious business websites for two decades. Its maturity, flexibility, and the breadth of the support ecosystem around it make it the most robust choice for businesses that depend on their website.
9. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: Choosing a platform based on cost alone
The cheapest option at launch is rarely the cheapest option over time. Always model the full three-year cost, including the cost of switching platforms if things do not work out.
Fix: Request a full cost comparison from your web agency or digital partner before committing to a platform.
Mistake 2: Assuming AI-generated code is production-ready
AI builders are improving rapidly, but the code they generate can contain logic errors, security misconfigurations, and structural issues that a professional developer would address during a normal build process.
Fix: If you are using AI-generated code for anything more than a prototype, have a qualified developer review it before it goes live.
Mistake 3: Not thinking about content management
Many business owners focus on how a website looks at launch, not on how easy it will be to maintain day-to-day. A website that requires developer involvement every time you want to update a page is not a practical tool for a marketing team.
Fix: Before choosing a platform, map out who will update the website, how often, and what they will need to change. Test the content editing workflow before committing.
Mistake 4: Building a business-critical website on a platform you cannot easily leave
If the platform changes its terms, increases its prices, or ceases to operate, what is your contingency? Many businesses discover this risk only when they are already in trouble.
Fix: Apply the portability test to any platform you are considering. Make sure you understand what it would take — in time and money — to migrate to a different solution if you needed to.
Mistake 5: Neglecting security on WordPress because it “seems complicated”
Some business owners avoid proactive security management because it feels technical and unfamiliar. This is one of the most costly mistakes in digital business.
Fix: Use a managed WordPress host or appoint a professional like UURI Digital to manage updates and security monitoring. The cost is modest relative to the potential impact of a breach.
10. Frequently Asked Questions
Can I export my Lovable website and host it elsewhere?
Lovable does allow you to export your project to GitHub. However, the exported code requires developer expertise to deploy and maintain independently. It is not a ready-to-move website in the way that a WordPress export is. If you do not have a developer who can work with a React/Supabase codebase, the exported code has limited practical value without additional investment.
Is WordPress difficult to use for someone non-technical?
Modern managed WordPress hosting has made the initial setup much more accessible. For day-to-day content management, the WordPress block editor is designed for non-technical users and is comparable in ease of use to many commercial website builders. The more technical aspects — server management, security, updates — can be outsourced to a management service.
Is Lovable secure enough for a business website?
Lovable handles its hosting infrastructure security, but the security of AI-generated code — particularly for backend logic and database interactions — has not been subject to the same level of industry scrutiny as mature platforms. For websites that handle customer data, payment information, or other sensitive information, we recommend a thorough security review by a qualified developer before going live.
What happens if Lovable changes its pricing or shuts down?
This is a genuinely important question. Your options would depend on whether you have exported your code and whether you have developer resources to work with it. If neither is in place, you could find yourself unable to access or migrate your website on reasonable terms. This is a material business risk.
How much does a self-hosted WordPress website cost?
A professionally built, managed WordPress website for a small to medium-sized business typically costs between £2,000 and £10,000 to build (depending on complexity), with ongoing management costs of £50 to £300 per month. These figures vary significantly based on your requirements. The software itself is free, and hosting is affordable.
Can I start with Lovable and move to WordPress later?
In principle, yes — but it is not straightforward. Moving from a Lovable-built site to WordPress is not a simple migration in the way that moving between WordPress hosts is. You would essentially be rebuilding the website on WordPress, using the Lovable site as a design reference. This is a meaningful cost that should factor into your original platform decision.
11. Next Steps
If you are currently weighing up your website platform options, here are some practical steps to take before making a decision:
Clarify your requirements
Write down not just what your website needs to do today, but what you expect it to need in two to three years. Include content management workflows, integrations with other systems, e-commerce requirements, and any regulatory considerations such as GDPR.
Request a professional audit
If you already have a website — whether on WordPress or another platform — a professional digital audit can identify security vulnerabilities, performance issues, and strategic risks. UZURI Digital offers website audits and honest, independent platform recommendations.
Model the full cost
Ask any prospective web partner to provide a full three-year cost model for your chosen platform, including hosting, management, security, feature additions, and the cost of potential migration. This gives you a genuine basis for comparison.
Test the content editing experience
Before committing to any platform, ask for a demonstration of how your team would update content day-to-day. Make sure the workflow suits the people who will actually be managing the site.
Get independent advice
If you are uncertain which platform is right for your business, speak to a digital agency that is genuinely platform-agnostic and can advise you based on your specific situation — not on which platform earns them the highest commission or requires the least effort to deploy.
12. Glossary
Open-source software: Software whose source code is freely available for anyone to view, use, and modify. WordPress is open-source. This means no single company controls it, and you can hire any developer in the world to work on it.
Self-hosted: A website that lives on a server you choose and pay for, rather than one managed entirely by the platform provider. Self-hosted WordPress gives you full control over where your website lives.
CMS (Content Management System): The software that allows you to create and manage the content on your website without needing to edit code directly. WordPress is a CMS. Lovable is primarily a build tool, not a CMS.
Plugin: An extension that adds new functionality to WordPress. There are over 60,000 free and premium plugins available, covering everything from e-commerce and SEO to booking systems and security.
Vendor lock-in: The situation where switching away from a platform becomes very difficult or expensive, because your website, data, or processes are deeply dependent on that platform’s proprietary technology.
React: A popular JavaScript framework used to build web interfaces. Lovable generates websites using React. While React is widely used, working with React-based code requires developer expertise.
Supabase: An open-source database and backend service used by Lovable for data storage and user authentication.
GDPR: The General Data Protection Regulation. UK and EU law governing how businesses collect, store, and process personal data. If your website collects any data from users — including contact forms, newsletter sign-ups, or e-commerce transactions — GDPR compliance is a legal requirement.
Managed hosting: A hosting service where the provider takes responsibility for server maintenance, updates, backups, and security monitoring, rather than leaving those tasks to you.
Portability: The ability to move your website — its content, code, and data — from one platform or hosting provider to another with reasonable effort and cost.
CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures): A publicly maintained reference system that assigns a unique identification number to known security vulnerabilities in software. When a security researcher discovers a flaw, it is submitted to a central authority, reviewed, and — if confirmed — given an official CVE number (for example, CVE-2025-48757). That number becomes the globally recognised identifier for that specific vulnerability, allowing developers, security teams, and businesses worldwide to track whether a known flaw affects their software and whether a fix is available. A high CVSS score (the severity rating that accompanies a CVE, on a scale of 0 to 10) indicates a serious or critical vulnerability that requires urgent attention.
13. Conclusion
The appeal of tools like Lovable is entirely understandable. The promise of launching a professional-looking website from a text prompt in minutes, at a fraction of the traditional cost, is compelling. For certain use cases like prototyping, temporary campaign pages, early-stage idea testing, AI builders genuinely deliver on that promise.
But for a business that depends on its website e.g. for leads, for sales, for client communications, for brand credibility, then the platform you choose is a strategic decision, not just a technical one. The questions that matter most are not “how quickly can I get online?” but “who owns this website, how secure is it, what will it cost me over time, and what happens if I need to change?”
On each of those questions, self-hosted WordPress – managed professionally – gives you more control, more flexibility, and more long-term security than a current AI builder platform like Lovable can offer. That does not mean AI builders have no role to play; it means that that role is not yet suited to business-critical websites.
At UZURI Digital, we work with businesses of all sizes to make informed, strategic decisions about their digital presence. We are platform-agnostic, which means our advice is always based on what is right for your situation — not on which solution is easiest to sell. If you have questions about your current website, are considering a rebuild, or simply want an honest second opinion on your platform options, we would be delighted to hear from you.
Get in touch with UZURI Digital — we are here to help you build a digital presence that genuinely works for your business.
NB: This post is intended as general guidance for business decision-makers. Platform features, pricing, and capabilities are evolving rapidly in the AI builder space. We recommend verifying current details directly with platform providers before making any commitments. Last updated: March 2026.