• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Open source backend-as-a-service startup Supabase raises $30M

September 9, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

Supabase, the backend-as-a-service startup, announced this week that it raised a $30 million Series A.

Supabase is often described as an open source alternative to Google’s Firebase … which is a pretty good way to put it for those who know what Firebase is. For those who don’t: Supabase is a collection of tools that helps developers build projects more quickly by automatically handling a whole lot of the behind-the-scenes work and wiring.

Create a project, and Supabase will give you a Postgres database; an API for interacting with said database that automatically evolves (and documents itself!) as your database changes; a user authentication system that plays friendly with the popular login providers (Facebook, Twitter, Google, Apple, etc.); a storage system for handling things like image and video uploads; and a UI for overseeing and managing it all. It takes a bunch of work you’d need to do to build just about any modern app or service and waves it away with a couple of clicks.

Supabase is free for hobby projects (or when you just want to tinker with it). Once you start needing bigger databases or data backups, the price scales starting at $25 per project per month. Alternatively, you can deploy it yourself, though that’s a bit tougher and currently means losing the management UI.

This Series A comes pretty quickly following the company’s last raise — a $6 million round announced in December 2020. I’m told this round was funded predominantly by Coatue, with some of it reserved for a few new key angel investors, including GitHub co-founder Tom Preston-Werner, PagerDuty co-founder Alex Solomon and Docker co-founder Solomon Hykes.

Supabase co-founder Paul Copplestone tells me that the team is now made up of 24 people, distributed all over the world. “We were born remote,” he said.

This reasoning is twofold: The company started growing just as the pandemic began to spread, and it’s largely hiring people who are already working on and contributing to the tools that make Supabase possible. Why make them move around the world when they’re already doing a good job?

“We use, I think, six different tools,” Copplestone said. “And we employ lead maintainers of several of those tools. We employ open source contributors, anyone who’s contributing, no matter where they live.”

Supabase was part of Y Combinator’s Summer 2020 class, the accelerator’s first cohort to be entirely remote. Meanwhile, YC classes are growing increasingly large; the S20 batch, for example, came in at over 200 companies. It can be hard to stand out in a group like that, but Supabase seemed to do it — I was hearing chatter about them early and often.

Here’s what it looks like to fire up a Supabase backend:

Source Link Open source backend-as-a-service startup Supabase raises $30M

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. France fines U.S. bank JP Morgan $29.6 million in tax fraud settlement
  2. Facemasks and sanitizer as French kids go back to school
  3. Spain’s Fallas fiesta resumes after COVID hiatus, rain damage
  4. Virgin Galactic to launch first commercial research mission

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • There Are Just Two Places In The World With No Speed Limits For Cars
  • Three Astronauts Are Stranded In Space Again, After Their Ride Home Was Struck By Space Junk
  • Snail Fossils Over 1 Million Years Old Show Prehistoric Snails Gave Birth to Live Young
  • “Beautiful And Interesting”: Listen To One Of The World’s Largest Living Organisms As It Eerily Rumbles
  • First-Ever Detection Of Complex Organic Molecules In Ice Outside Of The Milky Way
  • Chinese Spacecraft Around Mars Sends Back Intriguing Gif Of Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS
  • Are Polar Bears Dangerous? How “Bear-Dar” Can Keep Polar Bears And People Safe (And Separate)
  • Incredible New Roman Empire Map Shows 300,000 Kilometers Of Roads, Equivalent To 7 Times Around The World
  • Watch As Two Meteors Slam Into The Moon Just A Couple Of Days Apart
  • Qubit That Lasts 3 Times As Long As The Record Is Major Step Toward Practical Quantum Computers
  • “They Give Birth Just Like Us”: New Species Of Rare Live-Bearing Toads Can Carry Over 100 Babies
  • The Place On Earth Where It Is “Impossible” To Sink, Or Why You Float More Easily In Salty Water
  • Like Catching A Super Rare Pokémon: Blonde Albino Echnida Spotted In The Wild
  • Voters Live Longer, But Does That Mean High Election Turnout Is A Tool For Public Health?
  • What Is The Longest Tunnel In The World? It Runs 137 Kilometers Under New York With Famously Tasty Water
  • The Long Quest To Find The Universe’s Original Stars Might Be Over
  • Why Doesn’t Flying Against The Earth’s Rotation Speed Up Flight Times?
  • Universe’s Expansion Might Be Slowing Down, Remarkable New Findings Suggest
  • Chinese Astronauts Just Had Humanity’s First-Ever Barbecue In Space
  • Wild One-Minute Video Clearly Demonstrates Why Mercury Is Banned On Airplanes
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version