Legato secures $7M to reinvent how SaaS apps are built
Female-founded startup Legato has raised $7 million to pursue an ambitious goal: enabling everyday business users to design and deploy custom software without writing a single line of code. The company describes its approach as “vibe-coding” – a new way for non-technical teams to express what they want from a system in natural, visual terms and have the platform generate a fully working SaaS application.
The fresh capital will be used to expand product development, grow go-to-market operations, and deepen integrations with popular enterprise tools, positioning Legato as a contender in the fast-growing no-code and low-code software market.
What “vibe-coding” means for non-technical teams
Rather than relying on traditional software development workflows, Legato allows business stakeholders to describe the “vibe” of the system they need: how it should behave, who should use it, what data it should handle, and what outcomes it must deliver. The platform then translates those inputs into structured logic, data models, and user interfaces.
From requirements document to running app
In many organisations, product ideas start as messy documents, slide decks, or email threads. Legato aims to convert that ambiguity into executable software. Users can:
- Describe workflows in plain language, such as approval chains or customer journeys.
- Define entities like customers, projects, or tickets through guided prompts.
- Specify permissions, notifications, and automations through visual rules.
Behind the scenes, the platform uses AI models and workflow engines to infer relationships, generate database schemas, design responsive interfaces, and connect to existing tools through APIs. The result is a functioning, cloud-hosted SaaS application that can be iterated on in real time.
Closing the gap between IT and the business
One of the most persistent challenges in digital transformation is the gap between business intent and technical implementation. Requirements are often misinterpreted, projects run over budget, and IT teams become bottlenecks. By letting domain experts “vibe-code” their own solutions, Legato is targeting this friction directly.
The platform is particularly suited to teams in operations, finance, customer success, and HR that rely heavily on spreadsheets, email, and fragmented point tools. Instead of waiting months for a custom build, they can assemble tailored systems that reflect how they actually work.
Riding the wave of no-code and AI automation
The rise of no-code platforms has already reshaped how companies think about internal tools and workflows. Products like internal app builders, form-based automation suites, and visual database tools have shown that non-engineers can safely create business-critical systems when guardrails are in place.
Legato is positioning itself at the intersection of this movement and the latest advances in generative AI. Instead of forcing users to drag and drop every component, the platform leans on AI assistants to interpret intent and make smart defaults, while still allowing power users to fine-tune the generated logic.
Key capabilities of Legato’s platform
Although the company is still early in its journey, the funding will accelerate work on a feature set designed for fast-growing teams:
- Visual data modelling: Define entities, fields, and relationships without touching SQL, while the system enforces data integrity.
- Workflow automation: Configure triggers, approvals, escalations, and notifications using a visual rules engine.
- Role-based access control: Grant granular permissions to teams, partners, or customers with enterprise-grade security.
- Integrations: Connect with popular tools for CRM, payments, analytics, and collaboration via prebuilt connectors and APIs.
- Analytics and reporting: Build dashboards and track KPIs directly within the apps created on the platform.
Female-founded and scaling in a competitive market
As a female-founded company in the enterprise software space, Legato stands out in an ecosystem where women-led startups still receive a disproportionately small share of venture capital funding. The $7 million round signals investor confidence not only in the product vision but also in the leadership’s ability to execute in a crowded market.
The company will face competition from established low-code and no-code players, as well as from emerging AI-native development platforms. Its differentiation lies in the emphasis on natural, intent-driven design – the “vibe-coding” concept – and a focus on turning business users into primary creators rather than passive requesters.
Go-to-market focus: mid-market and modern enterprises
With the new funding, Legato is expected to target mid-market and modern enterprise customers that are under pressure to digitise processes quickly but lack the engineering capacity to build everything in-house. Typical use cases include:
- Custom CRMs tailored to niche verticals.
- Partner and vendor management portals.
- Onboarding and compliance workflows.
- Operations command centres aggregating data from multiple systems.
By enabling these organisations to launch production-ready apps in days instead of months, the company aims to demonstrate clear return on investment and reduce the backlog burden on internal IT teams.
Implications for the future of software creation
The funding round for Legato underscores a broader shift in how software is conceived and delivered. As AI becomes more capable of translating human intent into structured logic, the boundary between “coder” and “user” is beginning to blur. Platforms that can safely harness this shift, while maintaining security, compliance, and governance, are likely to play a central role in the next wave of enterprise tooling.
For now, the $7 million injection gives Legato the runway to refine its “vibe-coding” experience, prove out high-value use cases, and compete for a place in the modern SaaS stack. As businesses continue to demand faster, more flexible digital solutions, the company is betting that the people closest to the problem should also be the ones shaping the software – no code required.

