The income
$260K+ in revenue. ~$120 a month in costs.
Real customer payments over the last 21 months, pulled from bank statements and Stripe. Numbers only — no client data, ever.Every dollar is a one-time license sale — there's no recurring revenue, and nothing to churn. (Subscription products are already built into the platform, ready for the next owner to switch on.)
One-time revenue, last 21 months
Total operating cost (server · API · services)
Average month banked, across 21 months
Best single month (Jan 2026)
Customer revenue by month
Sep 2024 – May 2026Banked customer payments. Internal bank transfers and owner self-transfers are excluded.
100% one-time
Every sale is a one-time license. Nothing recurring, nothing to churn.
One-time license sales
Recurring subscription products are already built into the platform — ready for the next owner to switch on. Upside, not a dependency.
By year
Month-by-month detail
Every month since launchThe exact figure behind every bar above.
| Month | Customer revenue |
|---|---|
| Sep 2024 | $5,000 |
| Oct 2024 | $17,000 |
| Nov 2024 | $5,000 |
| Dec 2024 | $22,000 |
| 2024 subtotal | $49,000 |
| Jan 2025 | $13,000 |
| Feb 2025 | $5,703 |
| Mar 2025 | $15,212 |
| Apr 2025 | $12,985 |
| May 2025 | $20,482 |
| Jun 2025 | $12,580 |
| Jul 2025 | $4,435 |
| Aug 2025 | $28,418 |
| Sep 2025 | $18,117 |
| Oct 2025 | $3,817 |
| Nov 2025 | $5,485 |
| Dec 2025 | $6,398 |
| 2025 subtotal | $146,632 |
| Jan 2026 | $40,000 |
| Feb 2026 | $6,500 |
| Mar 2026 | $0 |
| Apr 2026 | $5,000 |
| May 2026 | $10,000 |
| 2026 subtotal | $61,500 |
| Total | $257,132 |
How these numbers are counted
- ✓Verified against statements. Bank of America wire records and Stripe (after fees) reports.
- ✓Verifiable. Full statements available under NDA on a call. No client data is published here.
“If it makes money, why sell it?”
Not because of the product — it clearly sells. This year another of my ventures had a very large income event, and the resulting capital-gains tax billis what's driving the timeline. I'm moving into semi-retirement and consulting, so I'd rather sell this asset and book a development loss than write a giant check to the IRS. It's wealth preservation, not desperation — which is why it has to be an arm's-length sale to a single buyer I have no prior relationship with. A platform that already makes money, going to one new owner.
A proven, automated software business — sold once, to one owner.
Full rights to the entire platform, including resale. We'll talk terms on a call — verify every number first.