My main use case for Mendix is software development. I build both web and native applications for many clients using Mendix. I cannot provide any unique details about how I use Mendix for my clients, as that cannot be explained or exposed.
Software Engineer at a tech services company with 11-50 employees
Rapid app development has saved time and reduced team size for multiple client projects
Pros and Cons
- "Since using Mendix, I can say that mostly the development time would be a year, but we can complete it within three months with Mendix, which is very time-saving; in my career, I have completed around 9 to 10 projects."
- "Improvements for Mendix include that sometimes it gets hung while loading."
What is our primary use case?
What is most valuable?
In my opinion, the best features Mendix offers include scalability, development, reducing the development timeline, and it is very fast. Mendix's scalability works for me because it is drag and drop, so we do not spend time coding; we just drag and drop, which is much faster than traditional development. I find enough useful features in Mendix. Mendix has positively impacted my organization because it is a developing stack and is very much faster, making it easier to attract clients.
What needs improvement?
Improvements for Mendix include that sometimes it gets hung while loading.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Mendix for 3.5 years.
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What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Mendix is stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Mendix's scalability allows us to add a couple of rows or columns; you can add it in the entity, and it will be reflected as a table without needing much architecture changes.
How are customer service and support?
Mendix customer support is very quick, and within a week, I can close a ticket, as they solve it promptly.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Negative
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I did not use a different solution before Mendix.
How was the initial setup?
Mendix is deployed in my organization as both private and public cloud. For Mendix, I mostly use AWS. I believe Mendix was purchased from Mendix and AWS from AWS; they are using both to link, but I am not certain, as it is in the DevOps team.
What about the implementation team?
I cannot provide any unique details about how I use Mendix for my clients, as that cannot be explained or exposed.
What was our ROI?
I have seen a return on investment with Mendix, as in default software development, a team with 10 developers or more is needed, while here we can do it with one or two developers, so it is truly a money saver for the company. Since using Mendix, I can say that mostly the development time would be a year, but we can complete it within three months with Mendix, which is very time-saving; in my career, I have completed around 9 to 10 projects.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
Before choosing Mendix, I evaluated other options including React and Node.
What other advice do I have?
My advice to others looking into using Mendix is to learn the marketplace and come to Studio Pro, and you can develop the application. I give Mendix an overall rating of 9.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Last updated: Dec 29, 2025
Flag as inappropriateMendix Developer at a wholesaler/distributor with 501-1,000 employees
Cloud-based, helps fill gaps and that seamlessly integrates with existing systems
Pros and Cons
- "Mendix provides the ability to create solutions that fill gaps that I would otherwise be unable to address with standard software."
- "Mendix provides the ability to create solutions that fill gaps that I would otherwise be unable to address with standard software."
- "All software applications have their hiccups, including the Mendix Studio Pro developers program."
- "All software applications have their hiccups, including the Mendix Studio Pro developers program."
What is our primary use case?
I am applying the application to digitalize the Orbiq process and have created a customer-focused program to keep customers close. Additionally, I have an application that enables me to create quotations for my customers and their clients. I maintain and continue to develop these applications.
How has it helped my organization?
Mendix gives me the opportunity to build a solution that is more attractive to my end users, allowing me to create my own specific software. I use an ERP program called EnterpriseOne from Oracle, but ERP software options can be rigid and not practical for end users. Mendix fills the gaps where other software falls short.
What is most valuable?
Mendix provides the ability to create solutions that fill gaps that I would otherwise be unable to address with standard software. It integrates seamlessly with my existing ERP systems, enabling me to build attractive and user-specific solutions. Its cloud-based platform supports agile methods and enhances my development speed. These features enable me to better meet my organizational needs.
What needs improvement?
All software applications have their hiccups, including the Mendix Studio Pro developers program. Though still improving, there is no specific example of what really needs to be improved. Some learning paths need improvement, but most are satisfactory. It is not one hundred percent stable.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Mendix since June last year, so that's about one year and a half.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
The product is generally stable, however, is not 100% stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Mendix supports scaling well with its comprehensive online documentation and learning paths. Consultancies can assist with scaling from small teams to enterprise levels.
How are customer service and support?
I find support accessible. I haven't often needed to seek direct support from Mendix teams as their online resources and knowledge database are comprehensive. I rate their technical support between eight or nine out of ten.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Positive
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I previously worked with IBM Notes. However, since IBM Notes is no longer on IBM and will likely disappear, I have found Mendix to be better for the long term.
What about the implementation team?
You definitely need professional people to do the development in Mendix, especially if you're a small company.
What other advice do I have?
I would recommend Mendix to others, particularly medium to large-sized companies. For a small company, it might be better to hire consultancy companies.
I'd rate the solution eight out of ten.
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Other
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
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QA Engineer at a tech company with 501-1,000 employees
Web prototypes have accelerated API consultation and responsive design checks for multiple devices
Pros and Cons
- "Mendix has positively impacted our organization as we can construct or build prototypes easily, allowing us to do this in a short amount of time."
- "I think Mendix can be improved by supporting automated tests more easily."
What is our primary use case?
I use Mendix to build a system about the consultation of APIs. We are using Mendix to build a system to check SAP, which is another system, and we use APIs to bring information from SAP to this project, allowing us to construct a web application to show this information for users.
What is most valuable?
The environment checking feature in Mendix is helpful because it is easy to check how the design of the feature appears in different environments, meaning I am not spending much time on verification, and it is very easy to check in different dimensions.
Mendix has positively impacted our organization as we can construct or build prototypes easily, allowing us to do this in a short amount of time. For example, with Mendix, a feature that we generally construct or build in one month can be made as a proof of concept in two weeks.
What needs improvement?
I think Mendix can be improved by supporting automated tests more easily. For example, Mendix can add some IDs for each component to build the automation tests more easily.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Mendix for at least three years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Mendix is stable.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Mendix attends to our scalability needs for now.
How are customer service and support?
The customer support for Mendix is great.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Positive
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I use just Mendix with a low-code approach without switching from a different solution.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
We did not evaluate other options because the partner asked us to use just Mendix, so it was predefined.
What other advice do I have?
Version compatibility with Mendix is something we need to be concerned about. I would rate this review an 8 out of 10.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
Private Cloud
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Microsoft Azure
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. Partner
Last updated: Feb 3, 2026
Flag as inappropriatePrincipal Solution Architect at a computer software company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Provides an integrated approach to monolithic and microservices
Pros and Cons
- "When I often want to pitch Mendix, if there is something out of the box that is not available, I can always extend Mendix. Whether it's the front end or the back end, It can be extended with Java. I've also built many widgets using Mendix."
- "We are all moving away from a monolithic product model to microservices. We are building an F2DUI application to decouple the front and back end. Mendix provides an integrated approach for both."
What is our primary use case?
We built a SaaS product for our own customers and are developing internal applications for most of the MDM using Mendix. Additionally, we handle small to medium-complexity workflow management systems, whether process-related or complete system automation, using Mendix Workflow.
Some customers prefer building their products rather than buying them. For instance, they wanted a simplified version instead of purchasing a product management system, so we developed it. We built a couple of external-facing, consumer-facing applications, although the consumer base for these is small.
What is most valuable?
When I often want to pitch Mendix, if there is something out of the box that is not available, I can always extend Mendix. Whether it's the front end or the back end, It can be extended with Java. I've also built many widgets using Mendix.
What needs improvement?
We are all moving away from a monolithic product model to microservices. We are building an F2DUI application to decouple the front and back end. Mendix provides an integrated approach for both. Ideally, we should have a way to separate the front end and back end to scale them independently.
While Mendix does offer different ways to achieve this, I sometimes prefer having the front end separate. I don't want the back end to be tightly coupled with the front end all the time.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Mendix for five years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Mendix is quite stable. However, some customers do not always use the stable versions provided by Mendix, which include both LTS and MTS versions. If a customer chooses a version other than these two options, it may lead to stability issues. Therefore, we always recommend that customers choose the appropriate development version to ensure their applications' stability. Mendix offers stable versions, but customers must be educated about using them correctly.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
The scalability has an issue. When you buy a license for a private cloud, you can scale as much as you can afford in your private cloud. However, buying a public cloud with a t-shirt sizing model has limitations. You are limited to the one instance you can get whenever you want to upgrade. There is always a limit to whether they provide 30 gigabytes or 128 gigabytes of RAM. For the public cloud, its scalability is limited, so I'm rating it seven. The rating is nine for a private cloud or on-premise because you can scale however you want.
Most of the time, it is for enterprise customers because of the licensing and the user-based cost.
How are customer service and support?
Since we are an official partner of Mendix, we receive priority on requests. Based on my interactions, responses are generally quicker, but the quality of resolution varies. There are two levels of resolution: one is through the documentation and technical support they provide, and the other involves their expert services, which may incur charges. While technical difficulties can be resolved with their assistance, charges may apply. It's important to note that Mendix does offer expert services that can help solve any problem.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup is easy. You can get started right away.
What other advice do I have?
Integrating with Mendix is generally easy. It is integrated with most modern frameworks, such as REST and Kafka. We've even integrated it with external workflow orchestration tools like JPM or Camunda. However, I have encountered some issues with Mendix regarding SDK-based integrations. While it is possible to perform these integrations, there is no direct way to do it, making the process more complex. For example, if Salesforce provides an SDK instead of a REST API, integrating with the SDK is more complicated than a straightforward REST API integration.
I would not recommend Mendix because it is very expensive for external users and can also be expensive for internal users. If your internal workforce is less than 10,000, I recommend Mendix because you can achieve a faster ROI. However, if you have an internal customer base of 30,000- 40,000, I would not recommend Mendix.
In version 10.12, released a week ago, Mendix introduced some new features I had requested multiple times. They now have an in-app help feature within the Mendix IDE to speed development. Specifically, they have enabled a chatbot within the Mendix IDE, which helps streamline development.
Additionally, Mendix should support modularity in each functionality. For example, the workflow engine should operate separately from the main application, allowing for independent deployment. This means I should be able to deploy the workflow engine, microservices, or UI components separately. If Mendix provides this option, it will be a game changer. This way, I can scale the workflow for workflow-intensive applications, scale the backend for high-throughput scenarios, and scale the content to accommodate many visitors.
Overall, I rate the solution a nine out of ten.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
Hybrid Cloud
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. Partner
Simulation Engineer at a retailer with 10,001+ employees
Offers incredible scalability with reliable support and an Epics feature for agile processes
Pros and Cons
- "Excellent support is offered for Mendix"
- "The vendor should focus more on the opinion of the users and make improvements"
What is our primary use case?
I have used Mendix to build interfaces for unique use cases where other generic solutions like MS Excel won't fit in. Our organization has used the solution to build small applications on the local cloud that took 72 hours, and these applications were already being worked upon beforehand using Python.
What is most valuable?
Excellent support is offered for Mendix.
What needs improvement?
The vendor should focus more on the opinion of the users and make improvements to the product accordingly.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Mendix for a year.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
I would rate the stability a nine out of ten. Throughout my experience of using the solution, it only crashed once, which was fixed upon restarting.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
The product exhibits incredible scalability. I would rate the scalability a ten out of ten. There are about 3000 Mendix users in our organization. The solution is currently used about once a week in our company. Plans are in place to implement more functions in the product at our company.
How are customer service and support?
I would rate the tech support an eight out of ten. The support team should be more proactive in providing solutions to specific issues.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Positive
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Previously, I have used Visual Studio, Jupiter, and Graphical User Interfaces.
How was the initial setup?
In our organization, we almost never needed to integrate Mendix with any other solution. I would rate the initial setup an eight out of ten. Some companies might need assistance with the deployment, but overall, it's straightforward.
At our organization, Mendix is deployed in the cloud and on-prem. The deployment of Mendix took around four weeks in our company. Our organization's team made an application using Mendix that was deployed in ten minutes.
What about the implementation team?
The deployment was implemented in-house.
What was our ROI?
The ROI is not always measured in terms of cost for products like Mendix; it's also measured in terms of the user experience, available information about the product, and the adaptiveness of potential users.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
I would rate the pricing a six out of ten. The solution is a bit expensive compared to others, but in the long term, it is worth it.
For instance, Microsoft Power Apps don't demand a huge investment to get started with because they integrate with the Microsoft Suite if it's already present in the system, but when communications with other systems are required, they need to be custom-built as Microsoft doesn't provide communication setup just out of the box, with Mendix such issues can be effortlessly solved.
The basic version of Mendix is enough to compete with power apps, but it can also be upgraded later.
What other advice do I have?
Mendix has accelerated the development processes in our organization and the speed to market solutions. There are Epics in Mendix that support agile processes and the development of stories. The paths generated from stories using the solution can be appointed to specific team members.
I would certainly recommend the tool to other users mainly because the graphical possibilities are immense for a beginner in Mendix. I would recommend others to build a suitable team with at least one specialist before adopting Mendix.
I look forward to the vendor's innovations in the product with Artificial Intelligence; for instance, there can be a connection to ChatGPT. Overall, I would rate Mendix a ten out of ten.
Disclosure: My company does not have a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Consulting Manager at a consultancy with 10,001+ employees
Low-code, helpful support, and great native mobile capability
Pros and Cons
- "They are leading in the smart manufacturing, and connectivity space."
- "There is always a layer of custom code required."
What is our primary use case?
We build various products or solutions for clients. It's mainly smart manufacturing use cases.
How has it helped my organization?
The ability to reduce the code, and the development, has been a very drastic improvement over custom code. The ability to have these vast amounts of connectors, which Mendix provides, especially in the manufacturing space, is great. For example, with OPC UA protocols, I have not seen any other low-code provider. That's very niche to pull machine data. That shows how much R&D investment they have done to build some complex connectors to simplify the user need.
What is most valuable?
Their native mobile capability is very good. In general, the way they launch the product has been great. Their product launching strategy is far better than any other platform. I work in OutSystems and Mendix. OutSystems is good for legacy mod or transformation end. With this solution, the product launching strategy is very, very agile. I really like when they roll out their updates, which are very, very frequent.
Mendix is currently leading in the smart manufacturing, and connectivity space. The integration they have built-in is great. No one else has gone that far.
What needs improvement?
There is always a layer of custom code required. There is a misconception of low-code, or Mendix, or the industry in general. They are perceived as more of a dashboarding tool, and as a visualization platform only, rather than building a complete enterprise solution. That's more of an awareness marketing challenge they have, or the industry has.
In general, AI needs to be better. The team and the company is running ahead with this a bit more. AI area is something which companies have started to pick up on, low-code wise, and they should invest in it more.
I would like to see their data hub module become a little bit more mature.
They need to expand their base as the concept is amazing. We just need to see more use cases and learn more capabilities there, and then definitely they need to fill in the AI piece of it.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been using the solution for the last 12 months.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
As a platform, in terms of stability, I like it. It is a very well-architected platform. After the Siemens acquisition, Siemens actually put a lot of money into it, the UI, to improve the solution and filled a lot of gaps.
Right now, if any company or client asks me for a low-code solution in Industry 4.0 space, I would just say, "You don't have to spend money on doing an assessment. Mendix is your go-to." If a client wants to do financial services, this and that, yeah, we can do assessments. We'll figure it out, whatever they need, however, in the manufacturing space, Mendix has found a niche and no one is beating them in that area yet.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
With platforms, you really need to figure out what all the platforms are capable of. They cannot do, for example, in the manufacturing space, machine data. They can show the machine data, however, they cannot store it.
In general, they have capabilities where they limit themselves, intentionally.
We have internal and external users. On the manufacturing side, Manufacturing companies usually have use cases that will have more internal users versus external, which means they are dealing with factory workers. Per factory, in that case, you may have 50 to 100 people. We've built apps for an average of 100 to 200 users per factory.
We are going full-scale on Mendix right now. The way I've seen the other products, anywhere where we have manufacturing and SAP side of the product coming in, we are proposing Mendix. We are pushing Mendix 100%.
How are customer service and support?
We've dealt with technical support. We have someone in the UK that helps us. We have a US team, too, who works with us, however, they work as one team. They have a global team and we get support anytime we want in terms of troubleshooting, client issues, setup, very complex on-prem IT, OT problems, et cetera. They were able to help us out.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Positive
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
I have done projects both on Mendix and OutSystems.
I prefer Mendix because of their Manufacturing related product development capabilities, which suites my need better in Smart Manufacturing space.
Moreover, both platforms are good, it all depends on the use cases.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup is very easy. There is nothing to do. The setup in development environment capabilities, they even provide citizen development capability, which makes them very competitive.
I'd rate the ease of setup five out of five. However, if you're trying to install this in an on-prem environment, it is a hassle on its own for integration. We are not talking about integration. We are talking about just the initial setup.
The length of deployment depends on the problem the company is solving, the use case, and a bunch of different things around it. It varies.
For one company we work with, we can build our own connectors, private connectors. We did that in hardly three to four weeks, which that company itself could not do on its own. A lot of things are available in the background, however, if we decide we want to do something a certain way, we'll just build it that way.
With a low-code environment, traditionally, you need fewer people to maintain everything. You only need one person to do the external integration, for example. You need one person who can do custom UI development for sure, as for any project you hit, you will have 30% custom development, for sure.
IF you have a team of five, where three are purely Mendix developers and two are full-stack developers, they can deliver anything. It's not like SAP where you need specifically SAP people to handle everything.
What about the implementation team?
We are able to handle the implementation process ourselves. We have a consulting in-house development team.
What was our ROI?
We can show an ROI. We are able to, on the factory floor, go and understand what all the needs of the clients are. We can see the manual operations they do, and try to very quickly convert them into a mobile app or an iPad or some application and give it to them. With the turnaround time very quick here, it helps save costs.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The solution can get expensive. A single simple application can start at $50,000. That's approximately the total cost of ownership. If you just quote on a single app without any support, they can even go as low as $30,000 to $40,000, however, you need a minimum amount of detail including minimum support and packages. This is an annual cost. While the app is free, you end up paying for more resources.
That said, it is pretty competitive. I'd rate it 4.5 out of five.
What other advice do I have?
We have a cloud version, hosted on AWS, and an on-prem solution as well.
I would advise others to not buy it blindly. Figure out the use case first. Do the cost-benefit analysis as the running cost of a low-code platform is a little bit higher, too.
They support startups, too, however, it might become expensive for them.
I'd rate the solution nine out of ten.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
Public Cloud
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Amazon Web Services (AWS)
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer.
Managing Director at a tech vendor with 11-50 employees
Simple initial setup and good development tools for building new apps, both mobile and enterprise web
Pros and Cons
- "We also use Mendix Enterprise Integration for complex business logic. It's a low-code platform, so we run Mendix in the Mendix Cloud."
- "The code refactoring tools could be better, especially for applications running for years. It's not bad, but it could be smoother. Also, writing new widgets can be trickier than it should be for some people, but not if you're familiar with Mendix."
What is our primary use case?
We have clients in petrochemicals, agriculture, financial services, retail, and all sorts of other areas. It is amazing when we use it for what it is designed for.
What is most valuable?
The development tools are excellent for building new apps, both mobile and enterprise web.
We also use Mendix Enterprise Integration for complex business logic. It's a low-code platform, so we run Mendix in the Mendix Cloud.
What needs improvement?
The code refactoring tools could be better, especially for applications running for years. It's not bad, but it could be smoother.
Also, writing new widgets can be trickier than it should be for some people, but not if you're familiar with Mendix.
Pricing used to be complex, but Mendix has improved that quite a bit. So, the pricing policy in general. It's not exactly straightforward.
The reporting feature also wasn't great, but Mendix has fixed that in version 10. I still need to test it fully, though. Version 9's reporting could be better.
In future releases, I would like to see more features around report writing.
Another thing is managing and breaking down monolithic apps into modules, with version control for individual modules, which could be more robust. Sharing individual modules wasn't as strong as it should be.
However, the biggest improvement still would be better refactoring tools, both for code and models.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using it since 2011.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
I would rate the stability a ten out of ten. We've been running large applications on it, and almost never have any issues.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Mendix is easy to scale for typical business applications. It's horizontally and vertically scalable.
It used to be mainly for medium and large companies, but the new pricing makes it much more accessible. Now, it's suitable for the whole spectrum, from small to large.
How are customer service and support?
The customer service and support are not bad. There is definitely room for improvement in response time. And they tend to escalate things quite a bit before acknowledging a problem. So, our experience has been a bit slow but not terrible.
How would you rate customer service and support?
Positive
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
Mendix competes with Outsystems, Microsoft Power Apps, Salesforce, and a few local players.
I'd definitely rate Mendix as the number one low-code, model-driven platform. It's much better than the competition regarding ease of use, pricing, stability, IDE strength, good training materials, and easy staff onboarding and certification. It has made major improvements in those areas.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup is very simple. It was super quick.
It supports all deployment models. You can run it in the Mendix cloud with a single button deploy, on your own cloud, or integrate it into your DevOps environment for scripted rollouts.
It's very flexible, and Mendix has really improved the deployment aspect. So, clients have complete control over deployment.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
The pricing is fairly comparable. I would rate the pricing a six out of ten, where one is high price, and ten is low price.
Which other solutions did I evaluate?
What other advice do I have?
Overall, I would rate the solution a nine out of ten. There is room for improvement.
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. Partner
Solution Architect and LowCode Practice Lead at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees
Low-code/no-code and has microflows, nanoflows, and data model access features
Pros and Cons
- "What I found most valuable in Mendix is that it's very much suitable for mobile apps such as native Android or IOS supported mobile apps. The multiple features of the platform are very, very attractive and very popular. Mendix has technical features such as microflows and nanoflows. You can also access data models in the platform. These are the features that are very, very strong in Mendix. I got my hands dirty on other low-code platforms, but I have not seen such strong features in them compared to the microflows, nanoflows, and data model access that are in Mendix, including creating and integration. The platform has out-of-the-box adapters or out-of-the-box-connectors that you can integrate with different interface applications such as SAP, Salesforce, Oracle EBS, etc."
- "The platform still has many areas for improvement. If I compare apples to apples, the PWA features of Mendix could be improved, for example, I wouldn't recommend creating a B2C or B2B marketplace or web portals on Mendix, but there's a tendency for people to still do it through the systems provided by my company, particularly implement B2B or B2C marketplace, versus using eBay or Shopify. On the web portal front, Mendix still needs to improve."
What is our primary use case?
My company is a service consulting company that works for different customers across the globe. When my company proposes Mendix for a low-code/no-code platform to any customer, or if the customer chooses Mendix, the license will be procured by the customer, and my company will take care of service implementation.
I use Mendix as a solution architect. I'm a low-code/no-code platform solution architect. Whenever a requirement comes to me, particularly one which demands low-code/no-code platform implementation, I use Mendix. For any B2C or B2B mobile app, or B2B or B2C web portal, any sort of headless commerce integration, or any cloud modernization, or SAP ecosystem within a customer, and the customer would like to implement a B2C mobile app, Mendix is an automatic choice because Mendix and Siemens have a very good tie-up or partnership, and it's not only from a business perspective but a technical perspective. Mendix is very much compatible with SAP. When my company sees that there is an opportunity to implement low-code/no-code, it proposes Mendix over other low-code platforms.
What is most valuable?
What I found most valuable in Mendix is that it's very much suitable for mobile apps such as native Android or IOS supported mobile apps. The multiple features of the platform are very, very attractive and very popular. Mendix has technical features such as microflows and nanoflows. You can also access data models in the platform. These are the features that are very, very strong in Mendix. I got my hands dirty on other low-code platforms, but I have not seen such strong features in them compared to the microflows, nanoflows, and data model access that are in Mendix, including creating and integration. The platform has out-of-the-box adapters or out-of-the-box-connectors that you can integrate with different interface applications such as SAP, Salesforce, Oracle EBS, etc.
Another valuable feature of Mendix is that if you want to connect with any legacy applications, you can write custom Java code because Mendix supports Java, the universal language. My company can write custom code and connect to any legacy or home grown applications for any enterprise ecosystem or IT ecosystem.
These are the strong benefits I see in Mendix.
What needs improvement?
I found some issues in Mendix. The platform still has many areas for improvement. If I compare apples to apples, the PWA features of Mendix could be improved, for example, I wouldn't recommend creating a B2C or B2B marketplace or web portals on Mendix, but there's a tendency for people to still do it through the systems provided by my company, particularly implement B2B or B2C marketplace, versus using eBay or Shopify. On the web portal front, Mendix still needs to improve.
Additional features I'd like to see in the next release of Mendix are better BPM modeling and workflow modeling, because their competitor Appian is very, very strong in workflow modeling. Workflow features could still be improved.
RPA features or automation features also need to be added to Mendix. Process Mining and AI email are also additional features that would make the platform better. All these features are offered by Appian, which is a complete package, low-code tool that's a competitor of Mendix. Adding all these features to Mendix would make it more competitive, not just over Appian, but over other similar tools as well.
For how long have I used the solution?
I have been using Mendix for the last three years.
What do I think about the stability of the solution?
Mendix is a stable platform. In terms of stability, I'm rating it eight out of ten.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
Mendix is a scalable platform. You can scale it up anytime. The platform provides you with much flexibility, and my rating for it in terms of scalability is nine out of ten.
How are customer service and support?
As a premium partner of Mendix, my company is constantly in touch with technical support, plus the Alliance team of Mendix. I am very well connected with the Mendix Alliance team. I find the technical support for Mendix very, very helpful and supportive. Whenever I reach out to the different Alliance people from any geography, I get prompt responses and I find the team very, very helpful.
Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?
We are working with different low-code/no-code products, not just Mendix. We have in our practice multiple low-code platforms. We are not only working with Mendix. We are working with our systems such as Hancock and Appian.
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup for Mendix was straightforward. You just have to download Mendix Studio Pro if you are using a desktop computer, and you can create your app very easily. If you are using the cloud version, for example, Mendix cloud or any other cloud, especially as any other cloud is hosting Mendix, it's really easy to access the developer. All partners develop the portal access where Studio and Studio Pro are enabled for my company, so my team can work on any cloud-based application. Setting up Mendix was very easy.
What about the implementation team?
The deployment of Mendix was done in-house. Deployment was not complicated compared to any other local platform. Deployment was very easy. Mendix has cloud architecture for different clouds such as GCP, AWS, Microsoft Azure, and even SAP Cloud. You just need to follow and you can deploy your Mendix components on cloud-native architecture.
What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?
Mendix is not open source, but its license cost is cheap, particularly when compared to the Appian license. The license model would depend on how many users you have and how many applications you are creating. If you are creating a single app, you just need to have a single app license, so it's free. If you want a multiple app license to cover two thousand or three thousand users, for example, internal users or external users, then you need to pay for the license. There's also a license model for above three thousand or four thousand, or five thousand internal and external users. Internal users are the developers who will create different applications using Mendix, while external users are the customers.
What other advice do I have?
Currently, I'm using Mendix. I'm heading the factories of my company low-code/no-code, and my company has Mendix as a local platform in the portfolio, apart from other platforms such as Appian, Hancock, etc. I'm using the latest version of Mendix, but I started with the basic version of Mendix when the platform was newly rolled out, particularly when it was just being offered to partners.
My company has a premier partnership with Mendix, so it has access to the Mendix private cloud. The solution is deployed on a private cloud.
My company has two hundred low-code practitioners using Mendix.
Before advising other people looking into using Mendix, I would check first if he or she is a single developer or a pro developer. A single developer is a business user. Mendix as a tool is very, very suitable for a single developer, for business users who have very little knowledge of programming language, so a single developer can create a quick app out of Mendix.
For a pro developer, or someone already hands-on in terms of different programming languages such as Java, .NET, etc., Mendix could be a piece of cake. For a small shop that needs a small application, the business user or single developer can create small applications, but for a midsize organization or a large enterprise organization, you need pro developers who are hands-on with different programming languages, so a single developer cannot build the app for an enterprise or a midsize organization.
If it's a first-timer pro developer using Mendix, it's a low-code/no-code tool, so he or she doesn't have to bother about the programming language. Mendix provides a visual ID or a visual model, so the pro-developer can just drag and drop based on the programming concept. Through Mendix, the pro developer can also work on the front end, UI forms, and also configure the microflows and nanoflows, and also configure out-of-the-box connectors to connect with different enterprise applications. Mendix is a very easy platform for pro developers.
My rating for Mendix is nine out of ten. It's a pure-play low-code platform, so ideally a low-code platform has some fundamental features, and Mendix has that. It's very much suitable for creating a mobile app, for example, a B2B or B2C mobile app. I recommend it to any customer for their B2C or B2B mobile applications. Any enterprise customer that has a SAP India ecosystem and seeking low-code/no-code platform implementation should go for Mendix.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
Private Cloud
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Other
Disclosure: My company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer. partner
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Updated: January 2026
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