Wix Acquires AI Chat Platform That Lets Users Build Full Apps Without Code

Wix Adds Ai App Builder To Its Stack

Wix has acquired AI bootstrap startup Base44 for about $80 million in cash, adding a conversational, no-code app builder to its portfolio of AI-assisted development tools.

The deal is yet another sign of the times where mergers and acquisitions are aplenty as larger players absorb startups to expand their portfolios for the masses — which, in Wix’s case, is 200 million users.

Base44’s chat-based interface is not just a web builder tool: It lets users create custom software solutions and applications using natural language processing without having to write a line of code.

A photo of a laptop on a table with a city skyline in the background
Shlomo shared a photo from “Base44’s early days” on his LinkedIn post announcement.

Wix CEO and Co-Founder Avishai Abrahami said this step is part of Wix’s larger plan to “make the digital world more accessible and creative than ever before.”

Maor Shlomo, CEO of Base44, said the acquisition provides the scale and momentum the company needed. Base44 will also maintain its own identity while being supported by Wix.

On a LinkedIn post, Shlomo said: “I believe Base44 has a real shot at building something truly transformative … It’s not going to be easy, and there’s still a long road ahead – but partnering with Wix, at exactly the right moment (this one), basically triples our chances of getting there.”

The buyout totals about $80 million, with additional earn-out payments tied to undisclosed performance metrics through 2029. Wix will also add $25 million in retention bonuses for Base44 employees this year.

The Data and Industry Impact

Over the past year, Wix has rolled out a wave of no-code and AI-powered tools, from integrated LLMs to AI-powered image editing and video creation.

Wix described the Base44 acquisition as a strategic move aligned with the rise of vibe coding, where users describe what they want and AI handles the execution.

Wix has been steadily building toward becoming the world’s biggest website builder. But with the Base44 acquisition, Wix is telling us that it wants to help users build anything digital, not just websites.

The push seems to be working: Wix closed 2024 with revenue up 14% YOY. It cited that growth was driven by high-performing Partners, with Partner revenue up 30% YoY.

TimingActivityWhat It Adds
June 2025Base44Natural-language, full-stack app creation; abstracts infrastructure complexity
May 2025Hour OneAI-generated video and interactive media capabilities
June 2021Rise.ai, ModalystGift cards, loyalty programs, and dropshipping marketplace integrations
March 2021SpeedETabOrder management tools for restaurant and food service verticals
July 2020InkFrogeCommerce integrations tailored for eBay sellers
Here’s a look at some of Wix’s mergers and acquisitions over the past five years.


With this in mind, Wix isn’t the only one ramping up its merger and acquisition activity. Plenty of hosts, SaaS platforms, and hyperscale giants are all racing to increase their share in the IT and web hosting landscape.

In 2025, World Host Group’s acquisition of A2 Hosting led to a full rebrand under the Hosting.com name. Network Solutions also continues consolidating its legacy brands, including iPage.

What It Means for Hosts

There’s an elephant in the server room that hosts will need to address: If users can create whole apps via a simple chat interface, what happens to dashboards, control panels, and dev workflows?

Wix’s spree is proof of what customers will expect from all hosts and builders: less setup, more automation, and near-instant creation.

That doesn’t mean traditional hosting is dead; plenty of businesses and developers still prefer the “old way of life” with total ownership over each and every layer.

But since buying innovation is faster than building it, smaller players specializing in AI-native tools and backend automation are quickly becoming the hottest acquisition targets.

We’re likely to see more. Based on what the major players are doing, smaller hosts may want to consider:

  • Exploring AI integrations that eliminate bottlenecks or confusion for users
  • Partnering with fast-growing platforms before someone else buys them
  • Leaning into what makes them different (finding that “core” value)

Now, the future of web hosting is a spectrum; there is no definite answer on where it will go — only what the market is asking and whether anyone’s listening.