CodeParrot, an AI startup backed by Y Combinator and co-founded by Vedant Agarwala and Royal Jain in 2022, has officially shut down after operating for nearly two and a half years.
The Bengaluru- and San Francisco-based company, which was part of Y Combinator’s Winter 2023 cohort, had raised $500,000 in pre-seed funding but was unable to raise additional capital to continue operations.
The closure was announced by co-founder and CTO Vedant Agarwala in a candid LinkedIn post, where he reflected on the company’s journey, pivots, and challenges. Despite early promise and some initial traction, CodeParrot struggled to generate sufficient revenue and failed to secure investor confidence for a seed round.
CodeParrot – Journey of Pivots and Learnings
CodeParrot was originally built to automate engineering workflows, beginning with a tool that could capture API calls from production environments and integrate backend service requests, third-party APIs, and data flows. The company’s mission was to eliminate human errors and speed up the development process using AI.
As the team sought stronger product-market fit, they made several strategic pivots. Their final offering was a developer tool that could convert Figma designs and UI screenshots into production-ready code using large language models (LLMs). The product, available as a Visual Studio Code extension, supported popular frameworks such as React, Flutter, and HTML.
Despite the technological advancement, the product only managed to generate $1,500 in monthly recurring revenue—insufficient to sustain the team or attract further investment. Agarwala referred to this phase as spending over a year in “pivot hell,” as the team attempted to define the company’s core value proposition.
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At its peak, CodeParrot claimed to be the only platform that could generate user interfaces by deeply analyzing a developer’s existing codebase and component libraries. The company’s website, still active at the time of writing, highlights adoption by developers from companies like Udaan, Freshworks, Capgemini, and Infosys. It also references an open-source release planned for 2024—a milestone the company was unable to achieve before shutting down.
The startup, which had only two engineers on its team at the time of closure, had to let go of its staff due to a lack of runway.
Reflecting on the experience, Agarwala mentioned that one of the most fulfilling moments was being accepted into Y Combinator and receiving their first customer payment via Stripe.
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He also shared some of the lessons learned from building AI tools, particularly around the limitations of prompt engineering and the need for robust evaluation systems. “Prompting gets you 90% of the way there. Evaluation gets you to production,” he wrote, emphasizing the importance of reliability in developer-focused AI applications.
CodeParrot’s closure follows a similar announcement from Subtl.ai, another Indian AI startup that shut down due to funding constraints.
However, the broader AI investment landscape in India remains active. A recent report by Inc42 reveals that 57% of venture capital firms are currently exploring early-stage AI startups, while 22% are looking at growth-stage opportunities in the space.
