Software shipped in weeks. By the engineer who builds it.
Next.js 15 + Postgres + Stripe. Top 3% Upwork, 100% Job Success, NDA before the first call. Fixed price, written deadline, 25% back if we miss it.
A multi-role operations platform for a managed-IT shop — ticketing, work orders, AI intake, Kanban dispatch, 1,000+ daily ops across 5 user roles. Built in 6 weeks.
Custom software development at Wolrix means a fixed price, a fixed deadline, and one technical lead running the build. Most projects ship in 2–8 weeks on a default stack of Next.js + Postgres + Drizzle + Stripe + Vercel. Our most recent ship: a multi-role operations platform for a managed-IT shop — ticketing, work orders, AI intake, Kanban dispatch, 1,000+ daily ops, built in 6 weeks. Top 3% on Upwork.
Quick answers
What apps have you shipped recently?
An MSP operations platform with ticketing, work orders, AI intake, and Kanban dispatch — 1,000+ daily ops, 5 user roles, 6 weeks. A doctor-patient telemedicine portal with video, e-prescriptions, Stripe, S3 — 8 weeks. An IP management platform for a legal firm. A UK pharmacy e-commerce platform with regulatory compliance.
What's NOT included in the price?
Hosting and cloud bills (Vercel, Postgres provider, S3), third-party API costs (Stripe fees, OpenAI/Anthropic), domain registration, and ongoing content/marketing. We name every line item before you sign.
What if scope changes mid-project?
Changes under 20% of original scope are absorbed in the buffer. Changes over 20% trigger a re-quote and an updated timeline. The change-order is sent over email and signed before work continues.
Who owns the code?
You. Client owns 100% of the source code at final payment. Repository is handed over open. No license-back, no exclusivity clauses on the code we write for you.
What ships, concretely
One technical lead owns the build — schema, API, UI, deploy. We name the components because the components are how you decide if we know what we are doing.
Postgres schema + Drizzle ORM
Schema-first design, migrations checked into git, audit log table from day one. Row-level security where the platform is multi-tenant. No ORM-of-the-month switching.
Next.js 15 + TypeScript app
App Router, Server Components, Server Actions where they fit. Tailwind for styling. Strict TypeScript, no `any` in checked-in code. Deployed to Vercel with preview branches per PR.
Auth, Stripe, Resend wired in
NextAuth or Clerk for sessions and OAuth. Stripe Checkout plus webhook handler for subscriptions and one-time charges. Resend for transactional email with React Email templates.
Claude/OpenAI where it earns its keep
Function-calling for structured output, prompt caching for cost ceiling, streaming to the UI. We pick the model after testing your data — not from the homepage of whoever spent the most on ads.
How it runs
Spec in 48h
You describe the problem. We send back a written spec, fixed price, and timeline within 48 hours. No discovery-phase billing.
Schema first
Database schema, API surface, and core flows agreed before code. Cheap to change here. Expensive later.
Ship weekly
Vercel preview URL from week one. You click through real software every week — not Figma frames or status reports.
Hand over the keys
Production deploy, CI on PR, Sentry monitoring, README that an engineer can actually use. You own the repo.
The default stack
Picked because it ships fast, scales to real traffic, and an engineer five years from now can read the code without a Rosetta Stone.
Pricing
Single-purpose web apps, dashboards, integrations, internal tools. Fixed price, fixed timeline.
Multi-role platforms, complex integrations, full systems with admin, reporting, and API layers.
Architecture review, stack selection, code audit, technical planning. Pay only for hours used.
Wolrix vs. an agency
Agencies sell process. We sell output. The difference, in practice.
Send the spec. Get the quote.
Fixed price, written deadline, NDA signed before any details change hands.