Over the last few months, when “vibe coding” and AI builds started exploding everywhere, I found myself experimenting more than ever — testing platforms, building quick prototypes, and just following the excitement to see what real people actually needed.
During that phase, I noticed a few gaps in everyday tools people rely on. Instead of just thinking about them, I built something for each one:
1️⃣ Periodicity — Period Tracker (www.periodicity.in)
This started with one clear theme: privacy and safety first.
I added a live location sharing module that allows users to send emergency alerts to their parents if needed. It also includes AI-based cycle predictions and a SPOC self-assessment tool so users can stay aware of potential health issues.
The best part? 50 real users tested it for 6–7 months, giving valuable feedback and validating the core functions.
2️⃣ BudFi — Budgeting & Finance Tool (www.budfi.in)
This one came out of my own habit of switching between multiple finance apps. I loved them, but I always wished everything — budgeting, goals, and investments — could exist under one simple dashboard.
So I built it.
BudFi tracks expenses automatically, allows manual entries, supports investment planning, and can integrate with APIs for future features. It’s been personally tested for 6 months and was also part of a hackathon submission.
3️⃣ Journal App (www.journal.budfi.in)
This was a personal need. I was writing my ideas, thoughts, and feelings across Notes, Calendar, and random apps — nothing felt truly mine.
So I created a minimal journaling space that includes daily logs, goals, and even voice journaling. No noise, no clutter — just a private place to think.
4️⃣ Telemedicine / Health Platform (www.vaccine.budfi.in)
This began as a vaccination tracker for parents — because relying only on government reminders often leaves gaps. Later, I expanded it toward a full telemedicine flow.
Some features are still under development, but the platform is live with core modules working: onboarding, records, reminders, and initial health workflows.
Why I’m Selling
I’m not selling these apps because they didn’t work.
I’m selling them because maintaining four different products on my own no longer makes sense. Each one is functional and has potential to grow — but they need someone who can give them proper time and direction.
I’d rather pass them to the right founder than leave them sitting unused while I pursue something bigger that I believe will help more people in the future.
If any of these align with your vision, I’m happy to share demos, the codebase, the mistakes, the lessons, and whatever else helps you evaluate them fully.