We all know that founder. Maybe it was you yesterday. localhost3000.com is the PaaS that takes your app from “works on my machine” to a real, public, production-ready URL in minutes.
hey, can you test my product?
http://localhost:3000
https://your-startup.localhost3000.com
Everything you need to graduate from localhost
localhost3000.com gives early-stage teams a clean path from local prototype to hosted app — without building a DevOps department first.
Instant app deploys
Connect your repo, push changes, and ship. No hand-written server setup. No accidental all-nighters with Nginx.
Real public URLs
Every project gets a shareable URL with HTTPS, so your cofounder, investor, and first users can actually open the thing.
Managed databases
Spin up Postgres, Redis, and storage without managing them yourself. Your MVP deserves better than SQLite in production.
Preview environments
Test branches before release and share them with your team. Less “wait, which version am I looking at?” energy.
Logs and metrics
See what your app is doing in production, catch crashes quickly, and stop debugging based entirely on vibes.
Built-in security basics
TLS, secrets, private services, and sane defaults — so you can look more like a company and less like an exposed Docker port.
The internet cannot access your laptop demo
The “localhost:3000” meme is funny because it is painfully real. Great products stay hidden behind local dev servers, tunnel hacks, broken env vars, and one founder saying “it should work now” every 12 minutes.
Ship faster than your excuses
localhost3000.com handles the boring platform work so you can focus on the app. Push code, get a live deployment, share a real link, and start collecting actual feedback from actual humans.
Questions from recovering localhost users
Is localhost3000.com a real PaaS?
Yes. The joke gets people in the door, but the product is serious: app hosting, databases, deploys, domains, logs, and the building blocks needed to run an actual startup.
Do I need DevOps experience?
No. That is the point. You should be building product, not spending your best hours debugging servers because one environment variable vanished.
Can I still use my own custom domain?
Absolutely. Use our generated deployment URL for speed, then attach your own domain whenever you are ready to look fully official.
Your startup deserves better than localhost:3000
Launch it on localhost3000.com and send a link that works for literally anyone besides you.