Kelviq is a complete MoR platform built for AI companies and SaaS.
A few years back, my co-founder Sachin reached out to me with the idea of building a price localization tool. It was mainly to support his JavaScript library plugins, which had customers around the globe. Another co-founder Alok also joined us. So, we built a tool (ParityDeals) to manually set up price localization. It went well, and later we added integrations with major payment platforms and became official partners for a few among that. We believe we did justice to the problem we set out to solve.
By continuously engaging with customers and understanding their pain points, we decided to build a full Merchant of Record (MoR) platform.
The market, especially for SaaS and AI, is going through a major transformation. Usage-based billing, global tax handling for usage-based pricing, and feature gating are now becoming essential. Price localization is now just another feature within the platform.
The platform is live since last month, and we already onboarded a good number of merchants. In the meantime, we also got into Canopy (5 weeks) program run by Founders Inc . We are in middle of that and before it gets too late, we wanted to launch publicly.
Today, we are live on Product Hunt, so if you are a founder or someone passionate about building something of your own, an upvote, comment, or a quick look would mean a lot.
Here's the page, scroll a bit to see the product Kelviq.
Thank you
Congrats for the launch. MoR solve a big pain for those who sell outside of their own country. Upvoted 👍
Thank you @Martcervantes
Love seeing tools tackle the headache of billing and taxes for global users. One thing I’ve seen folks ask for a lot is clearer sandbox flows, so founders can test weird edge cases without breaking stuff in production. If you ever add something like that, it could make onboarding feel smoother for smaller teams who move fast. Curious how you’re thinking about integrations with existing payment stacks too.
Love seeing tools tackle the headache of billing and taxes for global users. One thing I’ve seen folks ask for a lot is clearer sandbox flows, so founders can test weird edge cases without breaking stuff in production. If you ever add something like that, it could make onboarding feel smoother for smaller teams who move fast. Curious how you’re thinking about integrations with existing payment stacks too.
Love seeing tools tackle the headache of billing and taxes for global users. One thing I’ve seen folks ask for a lot is clearer sandbox flows, so founders can test weird edge cases without breaking stuff in production. If you ever add something like that, it could make onboarding feel smoother for smaller teams who move fast. Curious how you’re thinking about integrations with existing payment stacks too.
MoR for AI companies specifically makes sense right now. usage-based billing is the one thing Stripe still makes weirdly complicated and most of the existing MoR players weren't built with that model in mind
Kudos on pushing this forward.
I visited the product page on Producthunt. What caught my eye was "charging for AI tokens". In the product I'm building (a Life OS covering day-to-day verticals like reading, finances, tasks, wellbeing, connections, learning), I have several AI surfaces for the users. However, I'm starting with a BYOK model with an eye for full service in the future. I wonder how you streamline tracking and charging for AI tokens to make it easy for builders like me (although I'm a solo developer with a B2C product).
Also, would love to hear how you approached broadcasting your product on social platforms and when producthunt figured in the timeline.
Cheers and best of luck.
Kelviq is moving into a much bigger category than price localization.
MoR for AI and SaaS means billing trust, global tax handling, usage-based pricing, feature gating, and serious founder money flow. That is not a small plugin-support problem anymore.
One thing I’d watch is whether Kelviq carries enough trust as the platform expands. It is short, but it still feels slightly product-tool-like for something becoming merchant-of-record infrastructure.
A cleaner .com like Beryxa.com would probably fit this broader SaaS commerce layer better if you want the brand to feel more durable beyond localization.