MVP Development7 min read

MVP vs Prototype: What Should You Build First?

Confused about MVP vs prototype? Learn the key differences, when to use each, and how to make the right choice for your startup's stage and goals.

By GALOR Team

MVP vs Prototype: The Essential Difference

Prototype: A visual or interactive mockup to test ideas and get feedback. Not functional—can't process real data or transactions.

MVP (Minimum Viable Product): A working product with just enough features to be used by real customers and generate real feedback.

The simplest distinction:

  • Prototype = "Does anyone want this?"
  • MVP = "Will anyone pay for this?"

Both are valid approaches, but they serve different purposes at different stages.


When to Build a Prototype

Ideal Situations for Prototypes

1. Validating a Concept (Pre-Investment) You have an idea but aren't sure if it solves a real problem. A prototype lets you:

  • Show potential users what you're thinking
  • Get feedback before writing any code
  • Test multiple concepts cheaply

2. Raising Seed Funding Investors often want to see something tangible:

  • Clickable Figma prototypes show vision
  • Demonstrates design thinking
  • Costs $2,000-$10,000 vs $15,000+ for MVP

3. Complex UX Validation If your product's value depends heavily on user experience:

  • Test navigation patterns
  • Validate information architecture
  • A/B test different approaches

4. Stakeholder Alignment Getting internal buy-in for a new product:

  • Visual artifacts communicate better than specs
  • Easier to gather feedback from non-technical stakeholders
  • Reduces "that's not what I meant" syndrome

Prototype Types & Costs

Type Fidelity Cost Timeline
Paper sketches Low $0 Hours
Wireframes Low-Medium $500-$2,000 Days
Clickable mockup Medium $2,000-$5,000 1-2 weeks
High-fidelity prototype High $5,000-$15,000 2-4 weeks

When to Build an MVP

Ideal Situations for MVPs

1. Validated Problem, Ready to Test Solution You know people have the problem. Now test if they'll use your solution:

  • Real users, real data, real feedback
  • Can start generating revenue immediately
  • Validates business model, not just concept

2. Post-Seed Funding You have capital and need to move fast:

  • Prove traction for Series A
  • Start building user base
  • Generate data for iterations

3. Competitive Market First-mover advantage matters:

  • Ship before competitors
  • Start learning from real users
  • Iterate based on actual behavior

4. Revenue Validation Need to prove people will pay:

  • Functional payment processing
  • Real subscriptions or purchases
  • Validates pricing model

MVP Types & Costs

Type Complexity Cost Timeline
Landing page + waitlist Very Low $500-$2,000 Days
No-code MVP Low $2,000-$8,000 1-2 weeks
Simple MVP Medium $15,000-$30,000 2-4 weeks
Complex MVP High $30,000-$75,000 4-8 weeks

The Decision Framework

Ask These Questions:

1. What do you need to learn?

  • Concept validation → Prototype
  • Market validation → MVP

2. What's your budget?

  • < $5,000 → Prototype first
  • $15,000 → Consider direct MVP

3. How confident are you in the solution?

  • Low confidence → Prototype to de-risk
  • High confidence → MVP to validate

4. What's your timeline?

  • Need feedback in days → Prototype
  • Can invest 2-4 weeks → MVP

5. Do you need revenue?

  • Not yet → Prototype okay
  • Yes → Must build MVP

Decision Matrix

Situation Build This
Testing a wild new idea Prototype
Know the problem, testing solution MVP
Raising pre-seed Prototype
Raising Series A MVP with traction
Budget < $5K Prototype
Budget > $15K MVP
Need revenue to survive MVP
Internal tool validation Prototype

The Hybrid Approach: Prototype → MVP

The smartest path is often: Prototype first, then MVP.

Phase 1: Prototype (1-2 weeks, $2,000-$5,000)

  • Design core user flows
  • Test with 10-20 potential users
  • Iterate based on feedback
  • Finalize feature scope

Phase 2: MVP (2-4 weeks, $15,000-$30,000)

  • Build validated features only
  • Skip features users didn't care about
  • Launch to real users
  • Start collecting data

Why this works:

  • 50% less development cost (build only validated features)
  • Higher success rate (validated before built)
  • Faster iterations (design decisions already made)

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Skipping Prototype for Complex Products

Wrong: "We know what users want, let's build the MVP."

Reality: You'll build the wrong thing and waste money.

Fix: Even a 1-week prototype can save months of development.

Mistake 2: Over-Engineering the Prototype

Wrong: 3 months and $50K on a "prototype" that's basically an MVP.

Reality: That's not a prototype, that's a slow MVP.

Fix: Prototypes should take days to weeks, not months.

Mistake 3: MVP Without Clear Success Metrics

Wrong: "Let's build it and see what happens."

Reality: You'll have no idea if it's working.

Fix: Define success metrics before building:

  • 100 signups in first month?
  • 10 paying customers?
  • 80% task completion rate?

Mistake 4: Prototype Without User Testing

Wrong: Beautiful prototype that sits on your computer.

Reality: Prototypes only have value if users see them.

Fix: Schedule user tests BEFORE building the prototype.


Real Examples

Example 1: Dropbox (Prototype → MVP)

Prototype: A 3-minute video explaining the concept.

  • Cost: ~$1,000
  • Result: 75,000 signups overnight

MVP: Basic file sync for Mac only.

  • Cost: Months of development
  • Result: Validated demand before full investment

Lesson: Sometimes a video prototype is enough to validate.

Example 2: Airbnb (MVP First)

MVP: Simple website, founders' own apartment.

  • Cost: $20,000 in credit card debt
  • Result: 3 bookings in first week

Lesson: When you need revenue, ship the MVP.

Example 3: Zappos (Fake MVP)

MVP: Website with shoe photos, no inventory.

  • Bought shoes from store when orders came in
  • Validated demand before inventory investment

Lesson: MVPs can be "fake" backends to test demand.


Prototype vs MVP at GALOR

Prototype Services

Design Sprint — $5,000

  • 1-week intensive
  • Problem definition
  • Solution ideation
  • Clickable prototype
  • User testing sessions

MVP Services

10-Day MVP — $15,000 fixed

  • Full working product
  • Real users, real data
  • Payment processing
  • Admin dashboard
  • Source code ownership

Hybrid Package

Prototype + MVP — $18,000

  • Week 1: Design sprint and prototype
  • Week 2-3: MVP development
  • Best of both worlds

Quick Decision Checklist

Build a Prototype if:

  • You're testing a new concept
  • Budget is under $5,000
  • You need stakeholder buy-in
  • UX is critical to validate
  • You're pre-seed fundraising

Build an MVP if:

  • Problem is validated
  • Budget is $15,000+
  • You need revenue
  • You're in a competitive market
  • You're raising Series A

Build Both if:

  • You have $18,000+ budget
  • Product is complex
  • You want highest success rate
  • You can invest 4+ weeks

Next Steps

Still not sure which to build? Here's what to do:

  1. Book a free consultation — We'll assess your situation
  2. Get a recommendation — Prototype, MVP, or both
  3. Start building — With confidence you're building the right thing

Book Your Free Consultation →

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MVP vs prototypestartup developmentproduct validationlean startup

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