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Can someone fix my app or do they have to rebuild it?

Straight answer

Often it can be fixed rather than rebuilt, and only a proper assessment can tell for sure. Sound foundations that mostly need finishing favour a repair. Deep structural problems, tangled data, or security built in wrongly can make a rebuild cheaper in the long run. Beware anyone who decides either way before looking closely.

Information current as at 5 July 2026

This is the question that decides the cost and the timeline, and the honest answer is that it depends on what a proper look reveals. The instinct to hope for a quick fix is natural, and often justified, but sometimes a rebuild genuinely is the cheaper road. Understanding what tips it each way helps you judge the advice you get.

Plain English
Foundations
The underlying structure of your app, on which everything else rests.
Refactor
Reworking existing code so it is cleaner and safer without changing what it does.
Data model
How your app organises and relates the information it stores.
Rebuild
Replacing part or all of the system rather than repairing it in place.

Why only a look can tell

You cannot know whether your app can be fixed or must be rebuilt from the outside, and neither can anyone else, which is why an assessment comes first. Two apps that behave identically for a user can be completely different underneath: one built on sound foundations that just need finishing, the other a tangle where every part leans on a shaky one. The first is a repair; the second may be a rebuild. A partner who declares the answer before examining your actual code and data is guessing, and the guess usually favours whichever answer suits them. The honest position, before a look, is simply "it depends, let me find out".

When a fix is the right call

A repair is usually right when the bones are good. If your app is reasonably structured, the data is organised sensibly, and the problems are contained, like a broken feature, an exposed key, a missing setting, then fixing in place is faster and cheaper, and it preserves the work you already did. Many AI-built apps are more fixable than their owners fear, because the visible bugs are often surface problems on a workable base. A good partner will look for this first, because repairing what works respects your investment and your budget. The presence of real, working features is often a sign that a fix, not a rebuild, is the honest recommendation.

No pressure
Show us what you built.

If you have made something and it needs to become real, send it over. We will tell you honestly what it needs to be live, safe and yours, whether that is a quick fix you can do or a proper build. No obligation.

When a rebuild is genuinely cheaper

Sometimes, though, a rebuild is the economical choice, not the expensive one. If the foundations are fundamentally unsound, if the data is organised so poorly that everything built on it inherits the flaw, or if security was built in wrongly at the core rather than bolted on badly, then patching keeps costing more than it fixes. In those cases, endless repairs are the expensive path and a clean rebuild of the affected parts saves money over time. The key is that this should be argued with specifics: which foundations, why unsound, what it saves. A rebuild justified by clear reasoning is legitimate; a rebuild asserted by reflex is not.

It is rarely all or nothing

The fix-or-rebuild question is often falsely framed as total. In reality, the answer is frequently a mix: keep the parts that work, repair the parts that can be salvaged, and rebuild only the specific pieces that cannot. A thoughtful partner maps your system and gives you a part-by-part verdict rather than a single sweeping one. This targeted approach usually costs less than a full rebuild and lasts longer than a superficial patch. When you get advice, ask for it at this level of detail. "Some of it stays, this part gets fixed, that part gets rebuilt, here is why" is the shape of an honest answer to a question that is rarely all or nothing.

Common questions

Questions, answered

Is a rebuild always more expensive than a fix?
Not always. A fix is usually cheaper up front, but if the foundations are unsound, repeated patching can cost more over time than rebuilding the affected parts once. The cheaper path depends on the state of your foundations, which is exactly what an assessment reveals. Sometimes the rebuild is the economical choice, not the extravagant one.
How do I know if my foundations are sound?
You generally cannot judge this yourself, which is what the assessment is for. Signs that worry professionals include data organised so poorly that everything inherits its flaws, and security built in wrongly at the core. A partner should be able to explain, in plain terms, whether your foundations are worth keeping and why, rather than just asserting a verdict.
Can I get a second opinion on fix versus rebuild?
Yes, and for a big decision it is wise. If one partner insists on a full rebuild, a second assessment can confirm whether that is genuinely necessary or merely convenient for them. Good partners are not threatened by a second opinion. Comparing two honest assessments of the same system often makes the right path clear.
What if part can be saved and part cannot?
That is the most common real answer. A thoughtful partner keeps what works, repairs what can be salvaged, and rebuilds only the specific pieces that cannot, giving you a part-by-part verdict. This mixed approach usually costs less than a total rebuild and outlasts a superficial patch. Ask for advice at that level of detail rather than a single sweeping verdict.
No pressure
Show us what you built.

If you have made something and it needs to become real, send it over. We will tell you honestly what it needs to be live, safe and yours, whether that is a quick fix you can do or a proper build. No obligation.

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