A community platform created for indie hackers who build in public

IndieRoadmaps is where indie hackers share what they're building and turn their roadmap into a conversation. Post your planned, in-progress, and shipped features. Collect votes from real people. Build in public.

Most tools treat a roadmap like a private to-do list. We treat it like a signal. When you share your roadmap openly, you find out what matters to people before you build it, not after. That's the difference between shipping features that stick and shipping features nobody asked for.

Here's how it works: makers create a public roadmap for their product and add the features they're considering or already building. Visitors browse, vote on what they care about, and leave comments. When a feature ships, everyone who voted for it gets notified. No chasing users for feedback, they come to you.

IndieRoadmaps works for products at every stage. Pre-launch, it's a validation tool - real votes from real people tell you whether an idea is worth building. Post-launch, it's a prioritisation engine - the features with the most votes from your actual users rise to the top.

Building in public has always been one of the most powerful things an indie hacker can do. It builds trust, attracts early users, and keeps you honest. IndieRoadmaps gives you the infrastructure to do it properly: a public-facing roadmap that's shareable, votable, and connected to the community of makers and early adopters who want to see you win.

We built this because good ideas deserve an audience early, and because indie hackers build better products when they stay close to the people they're building for.