YC deadline in <2 weeks; Who's applying?
If you're applying, reply below with what you're building so we can cheer you on!
If you're doing a startup and not applying, why aren't you applying?
If I were starting a company today, I would 100% apply even though I've done it before with @Tandem (S19) for a few key reasons:
The partners help. A lot. (this isn't common. Most people who say they help startups are neutral or harmful)
The network is insane, especially for b2b companies. It will accelerate your G2M like nothing else.
You'll learn what real speed looks like, by grinding alongside the top early stage founders. Every time I talk to a current or recent YC company or go to the events, I'm reminded what top speed looks like. And I'm also reminded that the speed that start-ups are capable of gets faster every year, especially with AI.
As for hesitations...sometimes people balk at the dilution, but generally speaking, the higher price that startups command in their next round at Demo Day more than compensates.



Replies
Hyacinth Unlimited Design Subscription
Hi, we'll be applying with an AI Agent Design Platform, that lets businesses and users embed and integrate the custom agents into their existing websites, phone and desktop apps without maintaining any code or infrastructure. A lot of control over customization, output types and AI actions.
đ Weâre applying!
Tech By Tech Agents: The Global AI Agent Store â the first curated, specialist-powered AI agent marketplace built in Africa for the world.
Unlike typical AI âbot stores,â every agent is co-built or validated by real experts (doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc), fully exportable (web, WhatsApp, app, more), and standards-driven (weâre launching TAML: Tech By Tech Agent Markup Language).
We believe the next wave of AI is about trust, jobs, and real-world results.
Building our team, raising, and aiming to set a new global standard for useful AI.
https://www.producthunt.com/products/tech-by-tech-agents-no-more-junk-bots/
https://agents.techbytech.tech/
Product Hunt
@juvenal_lunguenda That's a lot of buzzwords. I'd suggest really distilling what you're building into plain English. Also, how do you know people want this? I've talked to a few marketplaces for agents, and I'm always a bit skeptical. Most people aren't really using agents. So why would people want a marketplace for agents?
@rajiv_ayyangarÂ
You're absolutely right about the buzzwords, Rajiv, thanks for that reality-check. Let me cut straight to what we actually do.
We help people get professional work done using tools built by real experts. Think Uber, but instead of drivers, you get verified professionalsâdoctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers, architects, translators, and moreâwhoâve turned their expertise into practical AI tools.
âš
You asked how we know people want this - here's the proof:
Paying users across 40+ countries in just a few months
80% come back and pay again - that's not hype, that's real value
Real companies like Kixicrédito (microfinance company in Angola) are choosing our tools for onboard document validation instead of hiring more staff
Our Arabic translator gets heavy daily use from Middle East professionals - and we don't even speak Arabic ourselves
Top construction companies like NSDC - Novas SoluçÔes de construção in Angola is co-creating with us by giving us ongoing feedback to improve our imagery tools
âšOur marketplace works because we believe no single company can build useful AI for every real-world need:
Users get expert help without expert hourly rates
Experts create a new digital income stream from their knowledge instead of just trading time for money
Trust is built in - you know exactly which professional built each tool
And yes, you should be skeptical about marketplaces - most are tech solutions looking for problems.
But when a microfinance company chooses our tools to boost their teamâs productivityâwithout needing to hire more staff, and professionals use our translator daily instead of other options, that's market validation you can verify.
âš
We know it's early days and there is a lot to prove, but we're building for real jobs and results, not hype. Always open to more critique and suggestions as we grow.
My Financé
@juvenal_lunguenda if im being blunt it feels like your response is AI slop and i was hesitant to read it for that reason alone.
Your social proof does seem strong, but i feel like you could have done a 10x better job at convincing me to care with 10x less words.
congrats on building and shipping! and esp on having paying customers!
just 2c from a random guy in the comments section
@catt_marroll You're absolutely right, Matt. That was invaluable, blunt feedback â exactly what we need. We clearly missed the mark on conciseness, and "AI slop" is a fair call for that length.
Thanks for acknowledging the social proof. Point taken on the "10x less words to convince." We're learning to distill.
Really appreciate your support. Your 2c are golden!
@juvenal_lunguenda Really interesting to see so many founders applying to YC and pushing their ideas forward. What stands out is how authenticity and real-world validation matter more than just buzzwords. It reminds me of how people talk about Real muha meds in the vaping space â the focus isnât only on the name, but on actual quality, trust, and the experience users get. Whether itâs startups or consumer products, the real value always comes from delivering something genuine that people truly want.
Hello @rajiv_ayyangar We are applying to YC with @Intlayer !! đ
Multilingual content infra for devs that started as a CLI, now expanding into a full content platform with React, Vue, Vite, Next, Nuxt, CMS sync, AI autofill and 200+ languages.
We've been dreaming of YC for a while. We're super excited (and a little stressed đ ) to finally take the leap.
@aymeric_pineau built it solo at first, now weâre a little team building it together đȘ
To the moon !! đ
https://www.producthunt.com/products/intlayer
https://intlayer.org
Sprinto
@aurelia_b super excited for you to take this leap! Go Go Go !!
@aymeric_pineau @aurelia_b All the Best Team Intlayer đđ
@rajiv_ayyangar @aurelia_b Super excited! letâs pull out all the stops and make the most of this opportunity!
@rajiv_ayyangar @aymeric_pineau To the moon !!
Meet-Ting
Product Hunt
@dbul Scheduling is a holy grail problem with a large graveyard. Huge if you can crack it. How well does it actually work?
Meet-Ting
@rajiv_ayyangar For 1:1 meetings, Ting can handle:
âą Direct booking (e.g. âTing, book me and Guest at 2pm on Tuesdayâ)
âą Scheduling (e.g. âTing, find a time with me and Guest next weekâ)
âą Rescheduling (e.g. âTing, that time doesnât work anymoreâ - from either side)
âą Canceling (also works from either side)
When both users are on Ting, we unlock a neat network effect: instant booking. No emails needed - Ting syncs server-side and picks the best time based on both calendars and preferences.
Current bugs weâre navigating:
âą Inbox setup edge cases (Gmail only for now)
âą Handling vague replies that trip up the AI
Post-closed beta, weâre focused on:
âą Opt-in memory to reduce user effort and improve preference recall
âą Richer context inputs for smarter, more human scheduling
âą Multi-guest booking (our âcalendar nirvanaâ if all users are on Ting)
Weâre launching here next Wednesday - would love your feedback!
@rajiv_ayyangar @dbul Reading through everyoneâs YC applications here reminds me of how founders like Kiki Abdul Rachman Benyamin approached growth â starting small, validating with real paying users, then scaling through strong community and partner networks. Itâs a good reminder that traction and trust often speak louder than pitch decks, especially when youâre building for real-world impact.
Meet-Ting
Unicorns Club
@dbul Super interesting â scheduling is one of those âgraveyard problemsâ where the winners usually have two things:
Curious: how much real-world usage youâve already seen? Not beta signups, but actual end-to-end meetings successfully booked, rescheduled, canceled, etc. YC (and investors in general) usually look for behavioral validation, not just feature completeness.
Inside Unicorns Club we see this pattern across many tools:
the moment teams get even 20â50 weekly active ârealâ users (not friends), retention tells the whole story.
Howâs it looking on your side today? Any early retention or repeat-usage signals since launch?
Meet-Ting
@juliayugo 100 per cent, a lot more since applied last time around! Scheduled close to 1k meetings, core users book about 20 meetings per month, and still not done any marketing!
Hey đ,
Iâm applying to YC (Fall 2025).
Iâm building Aelya, a vertical AI co-pilot for solo doctors. It auto-writes medical notes, fills forms, and saves hours of admin per day.
Most doctors in Europe waste 2â3 hours daily on documentation. Aelya gives them that time back without changing tools, and fully GDPR-compliant.
I burned out twice so I know how bad it gets when medicine becomes paperwork. Thatâs why Iâm building this.
MVP is shipping soon, already talking to potential early users in France.
@axel_brunet This is lovely! I messaged you on LinkedIn to discuss a potential collaboration.
Product Hunt
@axel_brunet Amazing, good luck. This is such an incredibly valuable problem. Sounds like you're building a product for yourself, which is a great way to approach a startup. I don't know how it is in Europe, but in the U.S., building tools for medical professionals often requires some creative solutions for getting into market. How easy is it to get MVPs into the hands of customers?
Thanks @rajiv_ayyangar , youâre 100% right !
Getting into the hands of doctors can be slow and painful, especially with hospitals and big EMRs. Thatâs why Iâm focusing on independent solo doctors first.
In France (and much of Europe), most are fully autonomous: no IT approval, no procurement, no red tape. If the tool saves them time, they will try it.
However, reaching them at scale is tricky: no obvious channel, fragmented market, and most are overworked.
So Iâm testing personnal outreach and small medical communities.
My MVP is built with that in mind:
â no install, no login
â works with their current setup (email, PDF, etc...)
â first test with a podiatrist in August â SOAP notes generated live during consultation
â then scale through small networks + medical resellers
Itâs still early, but I'm trying to keep the process frictionless, both product and GTM-wise.
Thanks for highlighting it.
Would love your thoughts if anything feels off.
Unicorns Club
@axel_brunet interesting! do you have a co-founder? do you have a clinical background, medical degree, or experience inside healthcare systems?
In our data at Unicorns Club, investors tend to look for two things specifically in products like this:
credible domain expertise (someone who deeply understands the medical workflow, regulations, documentation patterns),
a team, not a single point of failure â especially when the product touches compliance, safety, and high-stakes decisions.
Your story about burnout gives a strong âwhy,â but YC and early investors often ask who complements the technical side and who ensures the product matches how doctors actually work day to day.
Product Hunt
@g888Â News is such a tricky consumer space, but can be big if done right. I had high hopes for @Artifact . Do you have a sense of what happened to them?
@rajiv_ayyangar Prior to starting this I read a Failory article on how they lost a lot of traction by starting to take a too broad approach and pivoting away from being just a source for news. They became too social-media-esque (if thatâs a word) by adding things like user generated content and a more Twitter like feed. Though my take on why Artifact failed is that they were focusing on the wrong audience. They focussed on younger generations (16-21) which is not an audience thatâs as much interested in reading the news.
Trickle
I've heard so much about YC and often watch YC's YouTube videos. The vibe of building something alongside great mentors and a strong alumni community really excites me.
I do wonder if there might be online batches in the future? I know YC has always been in-person and requires staying together for 3 months, but Iâd be thrilled if there were ever a remote option too.
Product Hunt
@victoria_wu You should apply! I think with the community and general vibes of San Francisco, it's well worth moving to SF for three months. Garry in particular has been really intentional and effective at creating community in-person.
Vartiq
My Financé
@jonayed_tanjimÂ
Mega nit but your first card is larger than the others!
Vartiq
@catt_marroll thanks man! We just figured it out. Updated đ«Ą
Product Hunt
@jonayed_tanjim I'm not close enough to Webhooks to understand if this is a valuable problem to solve. But if this is a common build vs buy decision, my general feeling is that all of these decisions for Dev/Infra will move towards buy. Do you have customers yet?
Vartiq
@rajiv_ayyangar Yes, we currently have a few customers in our private beta, and weâre onboarding two YC companies soon.
On the problem side: itâs a real pain point that surfaces as companies begin to scale. Webhooks often start as a âjust make it workâ thing, but quickly become a reliability nightmare when the product demands more attention.
Our mission is simple: Stripeâs webhook reliability is legendary. Weâre bringing that level of infrastructure to the 99% of teams who canât afford to build it in-house.
My Financé
honestly this is pretty cool! i use stripe and indeed am always impressed (esp with their testing / debugging sandbox). i can imagine you finding a nice niche to fill here, hope it works out for you :) and keep posting about the voyage as you go!
Vartiq
@catt_marroll Hey man! Thanks a lot. This is really inspiring! We're grinding hard.
Unicorns Club
@jonayed_tanjim how do you think about the market size and the growth story here?
Inside Unicorns Club we see a lot of tools that developers love, but YC and most venture investors usually look for something slightly different:
a clear path from âuseful toolâ â large, fast-growing market with expansion potential.
Right now Vartiq feels like a tool, but Iâm trying to understand what turns it into a venture-scale company?
Your execution looks great â Iâm just wondering what the bigger arc of the story is.
Emma: AI Food Scanner
Why do people still care about YC and venture funding at all? The success rate of building a successful startup is miserableâfounders often trade ~4 years of their youth for the 'experience'. I worked at two VC firms; their business model thrives simply because they have a large number of shots.
@okhlopkov subjective experience, a lot of people I know who have gone on to start their own gigs went to YC just for visibility and it absolutely helped them. Some investors just want that orange badge on your page.
Also people absolutely realize the chance of success is low, but thats regardless of YC for a startup. When you're building alone or in a small team, it's a very small and special class of person (and I mean this in a very positive way) who can wake up and say "this is it".
YC is the hypeman for so many startups, and sometimes people need that to keep going.
----
Second side note, I've seen successful startup founders tell their protege's to apply to YC. Not to get in or anything, but solely as a humbling experience when they don't. There's so many reasons that an institution like YC matters in my opinion, and it's not solely just to have people get in. If thats peoples reasons for applying then yeah, I agree, this isn't the way to go about things.
Hello. Do you think it is worth submitting my project if I am from Ukraine and cannot travel to the United States?
I can't say for sure that my project will be selected, but if it is, would it be possible to collaborate online?
YC has been my dream since 2018, but I am apprehensive đ
Product Hunt
@ideaxton I'm not sure. They might have something on their site about it. They also might have some ways of helping you get over here. I think it's worth applying at the very least. The application has a good set of questions to ask yourself about your project.
@rajiv_ayyangar thank you đ