A startup-first app development partner for Bangalore founders — remote-first, honest about it
Bangalore is India's startup capital, and it shows in who we talk to: pre-seed founders in Koramangala validating a first idea, funded D2C and SaaS teams in Indiranagar and HSR Layout scaling a v2, and fintech and edtech operators around Whitefield and Electronic City who need to ship before the next board meeting. What almost none of them need is another directory listing. The head term 'mobile app development company in Bangalore' is dominated by listicles and agencies optimizing for the local map pack. Xenotix competes on something those pages cannot fake — a real portfolio of 110+ production apps and founder-led engineering that ships.
We will be straight with you, because founders can smell a fake local presence: Xenotix does not have a physical office in Bangalore. Our engineering HQ is in Modinagar (Uttar Pradesh) and our sales office is in Noida. We serve Bangalore startups remotely — and that is a feature, not an apology. You get the same IST working hours as your Bangalore team, weekly demos, a shared Slack, and senior engineers who are actually on your product instead of a local account manager who hands you off after the pitch. When a kickoff or milestone genuinely needs a face-to-face, we travel.
Our edge for Bangalore is the three angles that actually win here: MVP speed, AI, and transparent cost. We ship launch-ready MVPs in 8-14 weeks, not clickable mockups. We build AI-native — LLM features, computer vision, and ML in production, not slideware. And we quote in plain INR before you sign. That combination is why a funded founder picks a startup-first team over a generalist agency: we have shipped the exact kinds of products you are trying to build, and we have done it under real deadlines and real scale.
Transparent cost is the part Bangalore founders remember. Our MVP band is ₹4-12L, mid-complexity ₹12-35L, and complex platforms ₹35-60L+, and we hand you a line-item scope up front. No lump-sum mystery, no discovery-phase upsell trap. For a founder deploying investor money, knowing exactly what a rupee buys — and seeing working software every week to prove it — is worth more than a Bangalore pin on a map.




















