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No-code tools are AI-based systems that enable people with little to no coding skills to quickly have a working program or application in just a few minutes. At the same time, no-code can be used by actual developers who need a quick start – perhaps to build a template and save time importing libraries into a project.
One of the key names in cloud AI is Vercel, which was founded in 2015 and launched v0 in 2023. Designed to create “web applications with natural language prompts,” this is an award-winning tool that collected a 2025 Webby Award. To learn more about Vercel v0, we’ve assessed its features, pricing and plans, ease of use, and tested it with a prompt for a web app. We’ve also compared v0 with competing tools to see how effective it is against the alternatives.
If you want to weigh up the other options, take a look at our list of the best no-code platforms.
Vercel v0: Features
The main reason to use v0 is to create a web application or some other web-hosted tool accessibly via a browser. Capable of understanding plain English instructions (or your native language) and converting them into a web app, v0 can create and deploy a project in minutes. It employs continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) to make this possible, a feature available in all plans, from the free Hobby tier upward.
Vercel v0 has a web application firewall, global CDN, DdoS mitigation, and traffic and performance insights, along with Vercel’s serverless infrastructure model Fluid Compute. All of those features are available each tier.
Pro users also get team collaboration and viewer seats, faster builds with no queues, and enterprise add-ons, while Enterprise plans add guest and team access controls, advanced support, managed rulesets, and a 99.99% uptime.
Vercel v0: Interface and ease of use
All of the no-code tools we’ve assessed offer a focused user interface, with a prompt box in the middle of the screen. It’s the same approach used for search tools, and is immediately inviting.
Once the prompt has been made, things evolve with Vercel v0. Assuming you have already registered (Google, GitHub, and other accounts are supported, as well as your own self-hosted or corporate email address), v0 will begin to process the prompt, analyzing the instructions and delivering its processes via a verbose sidebar. It is incredibly straightforward, leaving you with little else to do but sip a warm beverage and be entertained by the AI’s updates for a few minutes.
Pulling back from the prompt box of each individual project you develop with v0, information about your account is available, along with all active projects. These can be viewed via a series of dashboards, which also display server usage, analytics (up to 50,000 events are supported in the free Hobby mode) and even information about what integrations are in use.
Vercel v0: Integration and extensibility
Integrations make no-code platforms far more flexible than basic web apps. Features such as databases and login authentication add data resilience, user-specific settings, and privacy. With v0, a considerable selection of integrations are available. These include Stripe for payments, CMS solutions such as Formspree, Makeswift and Agility CMS, and a range of AI tools such as ElevenLabs for voice AI and Perplexity.
If a database is required, AWS is available as an option, but v0 itself recommends Supabase. This can be set up and integrated by v0 either as part of your prompt, or later when the kinks and bugs have been ironed out. The process is wholly automated, and as with everything else within this no-code environment, can be completed in minutes.
Vercel v0: Deployment and maintenance
Using Vercel v0 to deploy a web project gives you several options. You can publish directly to a subdomain, or to a GitHub repository where it can be made accessible to collaboration. A completed project can then be branched and revised, and the changes pushed to the current live environment.
Of particular interest is the v0 tool’s ability to maintain an existing project. If changes are required, the chat interface, positioned on the left-hand side of the completed web app, enables changes to be made. For more direct revision, the code view can open each of the generated files used in the development of the web app, and live changes made.
For debugging, a live console is also provided. All in all, these are solid, accessible revision and maintenance tools.
Creating a crypto calculator with Vercel v0
With various no-code tools available to choose from, it is important to know how effectively they can take the prompt you give them and deliver a usable app. To this end, I developed a prompt for a cryptocurrency calculator that would show how much of a specific cryptocurrency could be bought in USD, GBP, and EUR for a specific amount of money.
To ascertain how v0 handles a no-code prompt, I outlined what I wanted from the tool. The idea is that the prompt should result in a user-friendly web app.
Here’s the prompt we attempted to use with Vercel – the same one has been used with other no-code tools that we’ve looked at:
Build a tool that compares the price of a specific asset (like Bitcoin) against multiple fiat currencies simultaneously.
Functional requirements
API Integration: Connect to a free API (like CoinGecko or ExchangeRate-API).
Input Handling: A field where the user enters a “Budget” (e.g., $1,000$).
Dynamic Calculation: A list or table that automatically updates to show how much of the asset that budget buys in USD, EUR, and GBP.
Toggle Switch: A “Dark Mode” or “Refresh” toggle to test UI state management.
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Vercel v0 timed the creation at 1 minute and 44 seconds, and produced a tool that not only worked as described, but met the clear specification of the prompt. Deployment options allow immediate publishing, either to a Vercel subdomain or a dedicated URL you already own and are ready to connect.
There is also the option to publish to GitHub, although note that this comes with some complications for publishing later – the option to publish from the Vercel v0 interface is removed once this happens, limiting you to logging in to the no-code tool with your GitHub credentials to push it live. This seems over-complicated, but I was able to instruct the Vercel v0 AI chat assistant to publish the project.
Vercel v0: Pricing and documentation
A compact collection of options are available for using v0. Vercel offers three plans: the “free forever” Hobby option, the $20/month Pro selection, and the Enterprise option, which appears to be priced on scale of use and has the option to request a demo. As noted above, the Enterprise option is aimed at development teams. There is no annual payment option.
Given the range of features available through the Hobby and Pro plans, however, these should suit most uses. Note, however, that additional usage costs are applicable with the Pro plan, with $2 per 1 million additional Edge Requests and $0.15 per additional GB of data transfer. Various other changes can be applied for server use, project build costs, and accommodating additional developers. So while the Pro plan may look affordable, it has hidden costs if you go beyond its confines. These have regional variations, which can be found in the Vercel.com documentation pages.
Vercel v0 has a useful collection of documentation, a knowledge base format that is both readable and searchable. In addition, the AI assistant can find solutions to bugs or issues with its generated projects. The knowledge base feels as though it has been curated or compiled by humans, and is easy to read.
Vercel v0: The competition
The pricing for v0 is far simpler than with most competing tools, which all offer more pricing tiers.
Vercel appears particularly adept at keeping to the confines of the prompt. Some of the tools we’ve used have gone “off-script” and produced additional features – such as a longer list of currencies – whereas the web app produced by Vercel is exactly as specified. On the other hand, deployment proved a little trickier with Vercel once GitHub was factored into the process.
In terms of creating a fast web app without mission creep, Hostinger Horizons and Vercel v0 are pretty much equivalent, although the former has a swifter set of deployment options. But the depth of the Hobby plan and the Pro price are certainly in v0’s favor.
Vercel v0 also falls short against Lovable in terms of the ease with which the generated web app’s user interface can be edited. This is a shame, as the alternative to a friendly point-and-click revision is getting embroiled in CSS, which a no-code prompter may not feel comfortable with.
Vercel v0: Final verdict
Competition among no-code solutions is tight. Most offer the same features, with a similar user interface, at prices that barely differ. The main points of difference come with the success of the initial prompt, what revisions are possible, and the deployment options.
Vercel v0 stands out in our testing for having a strong free plan, and for delivering a working web app that met the exact requirements (and constraints) of the prompt. Deployment and publishing was tricky, but the AI chat assistant helped to overcome any issues publishing the web app as a live tool.
While it lacks a mobile app, v0 is a strong choice for no-code projects, and should be on your list of options.
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