v0 by Vercel vs Lovable

v0 vs Lovable — UI components or full apps?

v0 by Vercel generates beautiful React components and pages. Lovable generates working full-stack apps with auth and databases. Both target developers, both consume credits, neither is right for a small business website.

Side-by-side

v0 by Vercel

$20/mo + credits

Lovable

$25/mo + credits

Generates components / UIs
Generates working full appsLimited
Database / auth integrationNative (Supabase)
Output formatReact codeDeployed app
One-click deployVercel
Design systemshadcn/uishadcn/ui
Credit system
Starting price$20/mo$25/mo
Requires technical knowledgeHighHigh
Designed for business websites
Best forFrontend devsFounders prototyping

Who is each one for?

Pick v0 by Vercel if…

Choose v0 if you're a frontend developer who wants AI-generated React components to use in your own projects.

Pick Lovable if…

Choose Lovable if you want a complete prototype app you can deploy and click through — auth, database, the whole stack.

The bottom line

v0 is best for generating polished React components to drop into your codebase. Lovable is best for spinning up working app prototypes with backend included. The right tool depends entirely on whether you want code to integrate, or a deployed app to demo.

A faster alternative

Or skip the comparison entirely.

For a business website (not a web app), Adviita generates the whole thing — no code, no tokens, no deployment configuration. $18/mo flat, free to start.

Try Adviita free

No credit card required

Common questions

Can I use v0 output in a Lovable project?

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Yes — v0 generates standard React components that can be pasted into a Lovable project. Many developers use them together for different parts of a workflow.

Which is cheaper?

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v0's base plan is $20/mo vs Lovable's $25/mo, but both consume credits based on use. Real costs depend heavily on how iteratively you work.

Are these good for non-technical founders?

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Lovable comes closer — it produces a deployed, clickable app. v0 outputs code that requires technical knowledge to assemble. Neither is friendly for non-developers.