PHP Startups
38 case studies with real revenue and traction data from php startups.
Honey Badger is a web application monitoring and exception tracking platform founded by three experienced Ruby developers (Josh Wood, Ben Curtis, and Starr) who were frustrated with Airbrake's decline in reliability and customer support. Starting as a nights-and-weekends project in 2012 while freelancing, they gradually transitioned to full-time over 2 years, leveraging their developer network and word-of-mouth marketing. Today, they're a profitable, bootstrapped SaaS company doing over $1M ARR with sub-1% monthly churn, operating with just 5 people on a 30-hour work week.
Laravel is a PHP web framework launched by Taylor Ottwell in 2011 that revitalized PHP development by prioritizing accessibility, documentation, and developer experience. Starting as a side project while Taylor maintained a full-time job, Laravel grew to become the most popular web framework in PHP with over 100,000 users, generating over $3M annually across the framework and ecosystem products like Forge, Envoyer, Spark, and Nova. Taylor built an engaged community through authentic engagement, free tools, and ecosystem partnerships, transforming a "dying" language into a thriving ecosystem.
Andre Azumov, a Ukrainian founder living in Bali on $400/month, quit his job to spend a year building multiple projects. His first successful project was Sheet to Site, a tool allowing non-coders to convert Google Sheets into websites. After initial launch at only $300/month, he shelved it to explore other ideas, eventually winning Product Hunt Maker of the Year before returning to Sheet to Site and rebuilding it with proper features, turning it into his flagship subscription product.
Thanksbox is a digital card and cash collection platform that lets teams celebrate occasions (birthdays, departures, weddings) without the friction of physical cards. Founded by Val Hinoff in May 2020 during the pandemic, the bootstrapped SaaS reached $18,000 MRR within 15-16 months by identifying a strong product-market fit with built-in viral loops (users must share the card to use it) and scaling via Google Ads with a $2 cost per acquisition against a $5.99 base price point.
Tony is a Vietnamese indie hacker who quit his corporate job in August 2021 with only 300 MRR in revenue from Black Magic to pursue building multiple products. Within one year, he grew to nearly $20,000 MRR across three main products: Black Magic ($10k/month, a Twitter growth tool), Snapper ($4.2k/month, a screenshot tool), and Dev Utils (~$4k/month, a developer toolbox). His success came from building an audience on Twitter, creating products that solved his own problems, and leveraging viral loops that kept compounding.
Matt DeSousa built Wide Bundle, a Shopify app that allows merchants to create product bundles with combined discounts in a streamlined checkout experience. Starting in May 2020 as a solo founder, he grew the app from zero to $37,000 MRR (~$450k ARR) in 2.5 years by focusing on proper problem validation, data-driven optimization (raising conversion rates from 7% to 40% through cohort analysis), and reducing churn. The app now has nearly 3,000 paying customers at $15/month, with 95% of revenue coming from Wide Bundle alone.
Nick O'Hara quit his $130,000/year engineering job at Wayfair to build Canary, a mobile app connecting venues with musicians for booking live gigs. After initial failures with cold calling, he pivoted to in-person sales and won a local startup competition. As of February 2019, he was raising $150,000 and generating $10k-$25k/month in revenue through direct venue outreach.
Pieter Levels is a solopreneur running a portfolio of 7 bootstrapped projects generating ~$2.7M ARR with 13M monthly active users. Starting in 2014 while traveling, he built Nomad List, Remote.ok, and other niche products targeting remote workers and digital nomads. His approach combines radical transparency (publicly sharing revenue), lean PHP/jQuery stack for fast iteration, and a personal brand flywheel where each product feeds audience and content back into the ecosystem.
Syed Balkhi bootstrapped WP Beginner, a WordPress education blog, into a billion-dollar portfolio company by age 32. Starting from nothing (his father was a gas station clerk), he built WP Beginner to 2-5M monthly visitors and $100M+ annual revenue, then systematically acquired 30+ complementary WordPress products (OptinMonster, Divi, MonsterInsights, etc.), applying real estate philosophy principles like 'making money on the buy' and 'heads I win, tails I don't lose much' to identify mismanaged gems and unlock hidden revenue streams.
Syed Balkhi bootstrapped a billion-dollar portfolio empire centered on WordPress and related SaaS products without raising external capital. His strategy leverages what Andrew Wilkinson calls 'barnacle on the whale'—becoming deeply embedded in growing ecosystems like WordPress, QuickBooks, and Xero. His portfolio now generates over $100M in annual revenue and includes investments in companies like Seahawk Media (productized WordPress development services) and positions in open-source projects.
WordPress powers 40% of all websites on the internet and was co-founded by Matt Mullenweg at age 19 as a fork of an abandoned blogging platform called B2. Automattic, the commercial entity behind WordPress.com and related products, has grown to 1,700+ employees across 90 countries and is valued at over $7 billion, with WooCommerce now representing over half its revenue.
Aunchport is a 10-year-old SaaS platform founded by Landon Ray that helps entrepreneurs remove the burden of technology to focus on building their businesses. Starting from hundreds of thousands of dollars invested over 5 years of failure from 2004-2009, the company exploded in 2009 and has grown to serve 6,000+ paying customers with approximately $14-20 million in annual recurring revenue, 100 employees, and profitability—all while maintaining very limited external investment.
Sherry Atwood founded Support Pay in 2011 to solve the complex problem of managing child support payments and shared parenting expenses. The platform transforms child support management by providing transparent, documented expense tracking similar to corporate expense reports. With 2,000 paying customers, $20k MRR from subscriptions, plus $80k monthly from setup fees, Support Pay has raised $7.1M including a $4M Series A, boasting a 3% annual churn rate and 12% visitor-to-paid conversion.
Norbert acquired AutoForward SMS, an established Android app doing $600/month, for $7,500 through Flippa.com in early 2021. By restructuring pricing and adding a paywall to a previously free premium feature (SMS forwarding API integration), he grew the business to $10,000 MRR within 12 months, serving 992 paying customers. The growth was driven primarily by organic SEO traffic for 'text message forwarding' keywords, leveraging the app's 5-6 year domain history and strong Android app store presence.
NativePHP is a project by Shane Rosenthal and Simon Hamp that brings PHP and Laravel to mobile devices. They have successfully turned this technical achievement into a profitable business at a very early stage, demonstrating the viability of porting established web technologies to unexpected platforms.
WildBit is a bootstrapped, profitable SaaS company founded in 1999 as a web development consultancy and evolved into a product business with three main offerings: Beanstalk (code hosting and deployment), Postmark (transactional email), and DeployBot (deployment automation). The company has 26 employees and generates multi-million dollar revenue while maintaining a unique culture emphasizing 40-hour work weeks, private offices, and customer success over growth at all costs.
HelpScout is a customer service platform founded in 2011 by Nick Francis and two co-founders who previously ran a consulting business. Starting with a free RSS tool that accumulated 200,000 users, they identified their own pain point in managing customer support and built an invisible help desk that feels like personal email rather than a traditional ticketing system. Through deep customer research, content marketing, and a focus on execution quality, the company grew to serve over 8,000 business customers in 140 countries, raised approximately $13 million in funding, and maintains a culture of product excellence and community education.
Bordable is a board management SaaS that centralizes communication, documents, meetings, and governance for nonprofit and for-profit boards. Founded in 2016 by Jeb Banner and co-founders after a client request, the product grew to $12M+ in funding, 2,000 customers in 40 countries, 50 employees, and multiple seven-figure ARR by focusing on the underserved nonprofit market, transitioning from product-led to sales-driven growth, and building proprietary features like Spotlight video conferencing and calendar-of-record functionality.