2
1 Comment

Product is done, why am I scared to ship?

Hello IndieHackers,

I recently built an app designed to help individuals, families, and caregivers navigate dietary needs and restrictions more easily. With a mix of vibe coding and my own coding knowledge, I was able to build it over about five months. What started as a simple habit tracker slowly evolved into a full-fledged platform.

At its core, the app lets users create a dietary profile that powers a universal filter across the entire experience. Users can also create family or care profiles, making it easier to manage and find food options for more than just themselves.

The app allows users to create grocery lists and recipes that only show products that truly fit their needs. They can manage multiple grocery lists, pantries, and cookbooks. There’s a natural loop where users save products to their pantry and quickly add them to grocery lists. Recipes can be shared, helping others with similar dietary needs discover options that work for them and add them to their cookbooks.

There’s also a community aspect. Users can join or create communities centered around specific dietary needs or restrictions. Within these communities, people can link products and recipes directly from the app, making it easy for others to access, save, and trust the information being shared from their community.

From an infrastructure standpoint, the app is basically done. I also built a full admin backend for product verification, moderation, and support.

I have bigger plans post-launch, including premium features and sponsored products, but right now I’m stuck. Even though the product is finished and ready for user testing, I feel frozen and hesitant to release it , despite knowing people would likely use it and I even have people waiting to test it out.

For those of you who’ve launched products before:
How did you get past that final mental barrier and actually ship?

posted to Icon for group Startups
Startups
on February 3, 2026
  1. 1

    just ship, you will find out that shipping is the easy part and marketing is a zhole new challenge good luck :)

Trending on Indie Hackers
From building client websites to launching my own SaaS — and why I stopped trusting GA4! User Avatar 38 comments The “Open → Do → Close” rule changed how I build tools User Avatar 31 comments I lost €50K to non-paying clients... so I built an AI contract tool. Now at 300 users, 0 MRR. User Avatar 23 comments Everyone is Using AI for Vibe Coding, but What You Really Need is Vibe UX User Avatar 21 comments Learning Rails at 48: Three Weeks from Product Owner to Solo Founder User Avatar 19 comments If you are About to Quit, Read This. User Avatar 10 comments