Over the past few months I've been building DB Pro with my co-founder. DB Pro is a modern desktop database GUI client designed to make working with Postgres, MySQL, SQLite, libSQL and other engines feel fast, visual, and enjoyable.
Our focus has been on the dev-experience. We wanted to absolutely nail the UX and look and feel as we believe most db clients aren't friendly to work with.
Some features:
Visual change review – See pending inserts/updates/deletes before committing them.
Inline data editing – Edit table rows directly without clunky modal dialogs.
Raw SQL editor – A focused editor for running queries with results in separate tabs.
Full activity logs – Track everything happening in your database for peace of mind.
Visual schema explorer – See tables, columns, keys, and relationships in a diagram.
Tabs & multi-window support – Keep multiple connections and queries open at once.
Custom table tagging – Organise your tables without altering the schema.
Tech stack: Electron, React, tRPC, Drizzle ORM, Postgres/MySQL/libSQL/SQLite support, and native builds for macOS at the moment with Windows, and Linux coming very soon.
We're super passionate about this project and we're actually documenting our journey through devlogs. The latest one is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-T4GcJuV1rM
Thanks, Jay and Jack
We want Neon, Supabase, and similar cloud providers to feel like first-class citizens inside DB Pro and not just “another Postgres connection”. Each of them has their own quirks, authentication flows, and connection requirements. For example, Supabase actually needs a paid IPv4 add-on if you want to connect to it in the traditional way, which isn’t obvious to most users.
So instead of lumping them in as generic Postgres connections, we’re building dedicated flows that understand these details and make the whole experience seamless. That’s why they’re marked as “coming soon”. We’re doing them properly.
It all goes back to our UX first philosophy to build the absolute best experience.
If you were running this on some cloud, maybe had some other extras built in that cost you time and money, then there could be a subscription.
If you want to keep your software updated, and are pushing updates daily, weekly, monthly, etc, I could squint at a subscription, but I would rather you just do critical fixes (bc if your product is broken you do owe paying customers a fix without a charge), and put new features in a new version that you will also sell.
People are selling git clients, calculators, db clients on subscription. it's crazy what the world has come to. We don't work to pay you guys rent.
The second I saw this app I was about to click buy (looking for a table plus alternative), went to pricing, saw subscription and immediately dropped it without even trying the free version.
We’re about to introduce a one time purchase option that includes a full year of updates. No subscription required. This will be available later this coming week.
Really appreciate you checking out the project and pushing us to make the right call for our users. Stay tuned.
Please have good formatting of SQL queries - like Datagrip. Very little open source SQL formatters out there, so might require something custom.
And very much waiting for Snowflake support (incl. OAuth)