Bitrise on AWS: macOS virtualized CI builder logo

    Bitrise on AWS: macOS virtualized CI builder

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    Bitrise on AWS seamlessly unites the mobile-first capabilities of the Bitrise Mobile DevOps platform with your trusted and secure AWS infrastructure.

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    Reviews (12)
    reviewer2867145

    Automation has transformed our release pipeline and maintains consistent, high‑quality deployments

    Reviewed on Jun 30, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is for automating CI/CD in the projects where I work. I use Bitrise to automate processes for pushing releases, building versions, and building PRs. When we open a PR, we automate the whole process, so Bitrise is responsible for running the project build, the unit tests that we have, and also checking that nothing is breaking in SwiftLint. These are the use cases that we have today in the company that uses Bitrise.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features that Bitrise offers are the automation and also the speed that we get. It makes easier some processes that we have internally here in the projects, adding speed, agility, and ease of maintenance of the project, and maintaining the quality of the code that we have in the project for the final delivery.

    Bitrise helps speed up the development process in my team because we stop doing the whole process of pushing versions and build checks all manually. Bitrise does this in an automated way. We configure the tool and then it already does all this automatically and with agility in the process. It facilitates deployment processes for us here, reducing development time, configuration time, among other things.

    A positive impact that Bitrise has had on my organization is that it kept the version releases consistent and we were able to catch PR problems, build and test problems, and SwiftLint issues during code review time. We were able to catch these points in an automated way through Bitrise. This had a very positive impact in terms of release deployment time and quality. Bitrise has helped us a lot in these processes. This has been a very positive impact for us here, especially because we work with several teams, and we don't have that much manual control over this. Bitrise manages to take care of this automatically and maintain the quality of the whole release process.

    What needs improvement?

    Today I don't see any improvement points for Bitrise. It serves us very well, and the project is going very well with Bitrise. At certain times we have failures within the tool itself where we need to debug, look at logs, and understand these points. Because of that, it wouldn't be a 10.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for five years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise has not had any stability issues for now.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    I would rate Bitrise's scalability as great.

    How are customer service and support?

    I consider Bitrise's customer support very good.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I have used Fastlane, but in some aspects the tool was not meeting our needs. So we migrated everything to Bitrise.

    What about the implementation team?

    The interview was great and very intuitive. I was able to understand everything and the questions were very objective.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Bitrise was evaluated between Fastlane and Bitrise for continued use.

    What other advice do I have?

    I would advise them to implement Bitrise as soon as possible in the project to make it easier to automate delivery and version release processes, including on the mobile side, which is my main area. I would give some suggestions for additional configurations. Bitrise with well-defined and well-configured processes is Bitrise that will work very well in an application. I would also advise them to understand which processes they need and what would be necessary within their project so that they don't make mistakes, so they can do an optimal configuration and have a great experience with the tool. I would rate this product a 9 overall.
    Eduardo Pisapia

    Automated mobile releases have transformed our build times and now support bi-weekly delivery

    Reviewed on Jun 30, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is as a build and deployment mechanism. I use Bitrise at the end of the day to generate a nightly build and also for all our release processes to the App Store and Play Store. It helped us with our main use case by solving issues around parallelization in the generation of the builds and also how to generate a build per pull request and share the artifact with the developers without giving them access to Bitrise itself.

    How has it helped my organization?

    Bitrise positively impacted my organization because the company used to do a release monthly or every two months, but with Bitrise system, we were able to optimize the process and now we do bi-weekly releases.

    In achieving bi-weekly releases with Bitrise, we noticed improvements in time saved. Our release and build process went really fast, taking 20 minutes to generate a build for developers to test and for QA, and that is all thanks to Bitrise for always bringing the latest machines, having their system updated, and maintaining it well.

    What is most valuable?

    I believe the best features Bitrise offers include their support team, which is the best feature they actually offer. They are really helpful and always jump in to help and are genuinely interested in your process and how to optimize your internal deployments and building system. Recently, they gave a new scaffolding to make the boilerplate easier and to structure your Bitrise files, so that would be the best feature they have right now.

    Bitrise gives you full control on the virtual machine and the processes, which has helped me specifically. They encourage you to do things right but don't force you to go through a template or a specific recipe that they have, so you can actually write your own scripts. Recently, for the EPO launch, we were coordinating the integration with Warsquare, a third-party company, and Bitrise actually helped us to do the connection between the virtual machine and their services, even though they are not required to do that. Whenever we spot any bug around our building process, they always jump in to help with a custom script, feedback, or insights from other clients that they have, and they also investigate for themselves what the problem was.

    What needs improvement?

    Bitrise's support team always receives feedback, so if you have any blocking point or improvement area, you can share it and they actually do it, which is something that surprised me. What they can improve right now is around the charts and metrics they provide. Right now, it is pretty generic about the performance of your machine and how much time each process takes, but they could evolve those charts to be more mobile DevOps metrics specific.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for the last five years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is stable, pretty much.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    On a factor of a Bitrise client, I think its scalability is great. They allow you to launch as many machines as you can.

    How are customer service and support?

    Bitrise's customer support is really good. They are quite supportive and always answer. The only thing that might be an impact if you are an American company is that most of their team is based in Europe, so for critical feedback or bug resolution that requires an architect from their side, you might need to wait until the next day or use European hours, but they always have someone on call.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I did not previously use a different solution before Bitrise at Hinge Health, but I was using TestFairy and App Center before. I switched to Bitrise because it is more stable and it gives you full control of the virtual machines and is easier to implement.

    What was our ROI?

    Around time saved, I think is where we got the best return on investment with Bitrise because our build process went from taking hours to 20 minutes or even faster. Regarding other money saved or employees needed, I do not have any specifics around that.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    My experience with the pricing, setup cost, and licensing with Bitrise was positive. They have a credit system and then evolved to a build number system. They also give you a buffer. For example, if you are reaching your limit, they notify you, and you also have a buffer. They guarantee you that you never run out of processes, ensuring that you will always be able to generate your build, no matter if you expand or pass that limit, and then coordinate in your next schedule an expansion of the number of builds or credits that you can use.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Before choosing Bitrise, I evaluated other options including TestFairy and Runway, but at the end of the day, we stuck with Bitrise because it was what was already implemented at Hinge Health.

    What other advice do I have?

    I advise others looking into using Bitrise to make sure that you have a good understanding of user roles and to whom you provide access to the tool, and to have a clear understanding of mobile operations. Whenever you use Bitrise, feel free to reach out to customer support for integration and help, because they can schedule one-on-ones with their experts and provide you with a full onboarding on how to use Bitrise and do things properly. I would rate this experience a 10 out of 10.

    Himanshu_Singh

    Automation has transformed mobile app releases and reduces dependency on dedicated hardware

    Reviewed on Jun 29, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    Currently, we are building and deploying iOS and Android applications through Bitrise. We have a web maker tool through which we build the iOS IPA and Android APK packets. We have multiple pipelines over Bitrise, and in a single project, I have multiple workflows in which one workflow deploys the application over bitrise.io and one pipeline I use to deploy over the Play Store and App Store. The main use case is building the Android packets and iOS packets and deploying them over the Play Store and App Stores.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features I would say are that if we want to build an application for iOS, we would normally need a Mac, but with Bitrise, we do not need any Mac as Bitrise already provides virtual machines based on my requirements like which Xcode version I have to use, what Android SDK versions I need, and what Java version I need. Everything Bitrise gives me on its VM machine.

    The way Bitrise provides the connectors is a good thing. The main thing which I love about it is that you do not have to write a full script and coding. It is not required in Bitrise as it gives a lot of plugins and we use fastlane, so Bitrise also gives us the flexibility to use fastlane to write the automations. That is also a good thing.

    Previously, we used to have multiple MacBooks through which we manually requested a person to deploy the build the application and share the IPA link and APK link with us. But now we have automated everything through Bitrise as it gives on-demand virtual machines and Macs. This is a big benefit, and we have reduced the DevOps engineer count from five to three to manage the mobile applications.

    What needs improvement?

    The biggest improvement I would say is that in the workflow, we have a plugin script, and that script window is dynamic. If we are writing something, it automatically gets shrunk. This is the biggest flaw which I have seen in Bitrise. If I am writing any script, it gets shrunk dynamically, and that should be removed or we should be given an option to disable it.

    The second thing is that currently we are using Harness to deploy our applications. Other platforms like Jenkins have set up webhooks through which we do not have to manually deploy any application and trigger the jobs into Harness. I want the same thing with Bitrise; we should get a Harness connector over Bitrise so that through Harness, we can trigger Bitrise workflows, and we should not give access to all the dev and QA for triggering the workflows. I would suggest that if we can have one Harness connector through which developers just trigger the build and automatically a job gets triggered to Bitrise.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for three years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is stable.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    As our code size is increasing, I have never faced challenges scaling my builds as Bitrise gives us the flexibility to increase the virtual machines. Bitrise's scalability is also good.

    How are customer service and support?

    I have communicated multiple times with Bitrise support regarding my builds and in case we want any older machines. The customer experience I have had is very good. They are very responsive.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Previously in my old setup, we had fastlane through which we used to manually deploy the applications over the TestFlights and Android beta releases. That was everything manual, and here we save a lot of time because I have set up the job triggers through which if anyone is committing to the branch, automatically Bitrise starts building the app, and if it is a development environment, it uploads to bitrise.io. I have also integrated the Microsoft plugins through which automatically developers and QA get notified, and they can download the applications from bitrise.io. Once the testing is done, we manually trigger the job workflow over Bitrise, and it deploys the applications over the TestFlights and beta releases.

    The first time I have used Bitrise.

    How was the initial setup?

    Previously, we used to take one day to deploy the application, but now in thirteen to twenty minutes through our automation and with the help of Bitrise's flexibilities, we deploy the application. That is where we save a big amount of time.

    What about the implementation team?

    Bitrise supports RBAC, which is the main point where we can isolate our projects based on the developers, QA, and all. We can isolate the accesses and authorization. That is a big point.

    I cannot comment much on the governance side because we have never faced any security issues whenever we had an audit. It also provides us the feature of secrets where we can encrypt the secrets, and I think from the perspective of governance and security, it is a good one.

    What was our ROI?

    Previously, we had five DevOps engineers, and now we need three DevOps engineers to manage Bitrise. Previously, we had to be dependent on MacBooks, but here we are not dependent on MacBooks as on demand we get the virtual machines and we perform our tasks. I think we have saved a lot of cost.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    On the licensing side, we do not manage that, as we have a different team that manages that. The costing is much less if we compare it to acquiring different MacBooks and building the applications. It is cheaper for us.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    I did not evaluate other options before choosing Bitrise.

    What other advice do I have?

    If any organization is having a mobile application, I would recommend them to use Bitrise because of its flexibility, scalability, and cheap and on-demand prices. I have rated this review nine out of ten.

    Akshay Khanore

    Cloud workflows have automated mobile builds and streamlined testing with chat-based triggers

    Reviewed on Jun 23, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is to generate builds for iOS and Android applications using Slack commands to directly trigger the builds from Slack to Bitrise and also create a CI/CD pipeline.

    A quick specific example of how I use Bitrise in my daily workflow is that when a developer provides us with a branch to generate a build, we use a Slack command to trigger the build on Bitrise. Then Bitrise generates the build. In the Bitrise workflow, we have added AWS plugins. Bitrise sends the build to AWS, and then the automation is run on AWS Device Farm using the automation code which is available on GitHub.

    I also use the Bitrise public URL for sharing the builds with the team.

    What is most valuable?

    The best feature Bitrise offers is the user-friendliness. Without interacting with the YAML file, I can directly use the user interface to add different types of plugins. Bitrise also provides Slack webhooks directly, allowing me to use Slack commands to trigger the builds directly on Bitrise.

    The user interface makes things easier for me because I do not have to log in repeatedly in Bitrise to generate the builds. I just use the Slack integration and Slack commands to trigger the build on Bitrise and then use the public URL to download the build directly on our testing devices.

    Bitrise has positively impacted my organization because previously we used to generate builds on our local machine, which was very time-consuming. Now all the build generation and the automation execution are directly done on Bitrise, and the automation execution is triggered from Bitrise to AWS Device Farm.

    What needs improvement?

    Bitrise can be improved because it has limited debugging capabilities. If there is an error in build generation, it is somewhat difficult to debug what exactly the error is.

    I would also mention that there is a learning curve when using Bitrise, and it would be useful if the documentation were more detailed.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for the last two years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is very stable. I have observed downtime very rarely, only one to two times in the last two years.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Bitrise's scalability is good. Before we used to have small applications, around 50-60 MB, and now we have application sizes from 300 to 400 MB without facing any issues when generating larger builds for IPA files and APK files.

    How are customer service and support?

    I actually have not needed to interact with customer support because I have found solutions directly online.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Before Bitrise, I used GitHub Actions but found it was not as user-friendly. We needed to add workflows manually in the YAML file, whereas Bitrise gives us the user-friendliness to add different plugins in our workflow.

    What was our ROI?

    I have seen a return on investment. The time saved is significant since the resources used by our local machine are not required when using Bitrise build generation.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing has been that previously we used to use a small organization plan, which we did because Bitrise is somewhat pricier.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    I did not evaluate other options before choosing Bitrise. I directly switched from GitHub Actions.

    What other advice do I have?

    I would suggest others looking into using Bitrise to use it because it is very user-friendly and has integration with different services such as AWS Device Farm, Slack incoming and outgoing webhooks, and can be used for the CI/CD pipeline.

    I think Bitrise is a really good cloud generation portal where users can easily onboard their Android and iOS applications and generate builds without using local resources.

    I rated Bitrise a nine on a scale of one to ten.

    I chose nine for my rating because it is really easy to create a CI/CD pipeline directly on Bitrise. First, the build gets generated on Bitrise cloud services. Using the workflow, we can add the AWS Device Farm workflow, and the build directly gets shared with AWS Device Farm along with the code and automation code which is available on GitHub. Once the automation is completed, the automation results are directly shared on the Slack channel.

    Regarding Bitrise's security capabilities, I think its governance and security are secure since the builds generated are not shared with everyone. We can choose if we want a private or public URL. Thus, if we choose private builds, then the builds are not shared with anyone. Also, when generating a build, Bitrise takes the pull request from our GitHub repo, which is done in a secure manner.

    In terms of Bitrise's AI capabilities, I find its accuracy and reliability of output to be really accurate because it has accelerated debugging. The AI analyzes the failed build logs and also summarizes this on its build page. Sometimes, the AI does the build fixing correctly and also applies changes to create a pull request for our repository.

    Ney Roman

    Faster builds have accelerated mobile releases and support rapid feedback from teams

    Reviewed on Jun 14, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is the deployment of our application to the iOS store and Android store, mainly.

    We migrated our pipelines from Bitrise to GitHub because we wanted to unify our tools. A simple example is our application deployment, where we automated all the processes from building to deployment and testing within Bitrise.

    Another use case that we had for Bitrise was the automatic building of the application and automatically depositing it to a bucket in which our QA team retrieves all the information, not just about the building but also the artifact, so they can do automated testing in other platforms.

    What is most valuable?

    The best feature Bitrise offers is the friendly UI that allows you to configure your own pipeline by dragging and dropping everything.

    Specifically, the drag-and-drop UI and custom code steps have helped us because at some point, we had two applications, one for businesses and one for people in general. The UI allowed us to duplicate the workflow, so we did not have to configure it again, just changing some specific variables.

    Bitrise has positively impacted our organization by providing a huge improvement at the very beginning of our operations. We previously used Azure Pipelines to deploy our application, which took two to three hours for an iOS deployment, while Bitrise reduced the simple building time to just 45 minutes.

    The faster deployment with Bitrise allows us to get to the market quickly, enabling us to receive feedback from clients rapidly, test our application internally, and deliver more robust solutions efficiently.

    What needs improvement?

    Bitrise can be improved by perhaps showing the statistics of usage without requiring a greater subscription, as the prices were really high compared to other tools and we lacked metrics of our usage, such as how many builds were completed and how many failed.

    Bitrise did what it needed to do during my time working with it, and I do not think anything else was needed since it was really easy to use, and its runners were really fast and optimized to do their job well.

    Regarding Bitrise's AI capabilities, I do not know much about its governance and security, as when I was working with them, the only AI features I used were a chatbot, which did not provide much information about how they manage the information.

    As for Bitrise's AI capabilities, the accuracy and reliability of output were not that good. Most of the time, it redirected me to a human or advised me to open a ticket, so it was not really useful.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been working as a DevOps engineer for three years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise was stable.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    We did not have the chance to make really huge solutions or pipelines. I think Bitrise has worked a lot on scalability, and I find it really scalable because you can create small portions of code or stages that can be reused in other workflows.

    How are customer service and support?

    My experience with customer support at Bitrise was really nice, as they were very patient, particularly with my non-native English speaking. They were always checking if we needed something, which was really good.

    It was really amazing to work with Bitrise. They have a really good customer support team, and technically, everything was really good. They found an employee who speaks Spanish to join one of our meetings, making it easy to continue our negotiations.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    We previously used Azure Pipelines and switched to Bitrise because it was way faster, had many integrations, and was really easy to set up. The UI helped us a lot to do our job well.

    What was our ROI?

    I have seen a return on investment with Bitrise, as at the very beginning, our deployment times for our iOS application were three hours, but with Bitrise, it was reduced to just 45 minutes, showing it was really fast.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing for Bitrise was positive since it was really cost-optimized. The setup cost was actually null, and it was really easy to set up and renovate the licensing.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    We evaluated CircleCI and GitHub Actions before choosing Bitrise.

    What other advice do I have?

    My advice for others looking into using Bitrise is that it is a platform to start new products, giving you an optimized version of a runner with good customer support that you can reach out to for anything you need. I would advise choosing it with complete confidence. I would rate this review a 9.

    Vikas Kejriwal

    Automation has reduced weekly build overhead and simplifies sharing releases across teams

    Reviewed on Jun 10, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    My primary use case for Bitrise is for continuous integration and continuous delivery, commonly known as CI/CD purposes. I use Bitrise to automate repetitive tasks of managing my app's life cycle for sharing multiple builds with the QA team, product team, and for finally releasing the build to the App Store or Play Store.

    Being in the mobile development field, I have to constantly handle multiple apps for my organizations. I need to share these builds across QA teams for both iOS and Android and with product teams for their reviews and for their tasks. Doing so manually would take a lot of time, but if I automate this process using Bitrise, I can easily share and easily reduce this time-consuming task.

    Primarily in case of iOS development, the build-making process is quite complex due to provisioning profile handling and related tasks. Bitrise simplifies that process completely for me.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features Bitrise offers include direct deployment to the App Store and Play Store and direct connection to both TestFlight and App Store releases, which is a great Bitrise tool.

    Doing the task of direct deployment manually can lead to several bugs in the release pipeline process, but once I automate it using Bitrise, this particular task is taken off the developer's hand and is automated, saving a lot of development time.

    The integration is quite simple, and once done, I do not need to revisit it again. Bitrise can easily handle multiple applications.

    Since I started using Bitrise, the development time, specifically the time that I spend on sharing these builds and handling the release process, is significantly reduced.

    A ballpark figure indicates that I save around three to four hours per week since using Bitrise.

    What needs improvement?

    Sometimes the builds fail, and the error messages that I get are not very descriptive. That could be improved.

    I give Bitrise an eight out of ten because sometimes builds fail, and the error paths are not that descriptive.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been working in my current field for more than twelve years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is stable, apart from the odd build failure.

    Apart from the odd build failure, Bitrise is quite reliable in its accuracy and reliability of output.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Bitrise's scalability is quite good. I have automated multiple apps from the same organization across iOS and Android, and they work quite well.

    How are customer service and support?

    The customer support for Bitrise is good. I never faced any issues.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I previously tried Jenkins. Different organizations prefer different tools, so in my previous organization, I used Bitrise, while Jenkins is also used in my current organization.

    How was the initial setup?

    The integration is quite simple, and once done, I do not need to revisit it again.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    I have evaluated Jenkins before choosing Bitrise; it is also a good tool.

    What other advice do I have?

    My developer's time is definitely saved, and I can say that in a week, three to four hours are easily saved.

    I would advise others looking into using Bitrise to definitely try it, as they can save a lot of their developer's time. The automation part, the redundant part of sharing builds and managing app lifecycle can be handed over to an automated system, significantly improving their output.

    I rate this product an eight 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?

    reviewer2834745

    Mobile pipelines have supported app releases and now need reusable templates and modular workflows

    Reviewed on Apr 30, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is to build and deploy mobile apps. To build and deploy my mobile apps using Bitrise, I clone the code repository with Git, realize the build of the mobile application, apply tests, SAST and DAST verification, and publish this app on the stores, Apple or Google.

    What is most valuable?

    I think the best feature of Bitrise is the flexibility to use third-party engines like Fastlane.

    I use third-party integrations like Fastlane with Bitrise to avoid vendor lock-in, facilitate my migration to another platform, and have a unique workflow for deploying about twenty to thirty apps.

    Bitrise has had a significant positive impact on my organization because we do not have any other platform to realize these builds and deploys with mobile apps.

    Bitrise has helped reduce errors in my workflows because I have tests, E2E tests, integration tests, and Appdome tests.

    What needs improvement?

    Bitrise has a strong mobile focus, and what could improve is the native support for reusable pipeline modules like actions in a GitHub Action, better templates, think Terraform style but for CI, and easier parameterization across workflows.

    Templates would be a significant improvement for me. It is the one thing I need and it would make my life easier with the workflows.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for four years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is sometimes stable, and sometimes I experience problems with Bitrise.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Bitrise's scalability is adequate.

    How are customer service and support?

    Bitrise customer support is slow but functional.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    I am not using a solution different from Bitrise. I am working on a migration from Bitrise to GitHub Actions because the cost is lower.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Before choosing Bitrise, I did not evaluate other options.

    What other advice do I have?

    You should consider Bitrise as it is a strong platform when used appropriately. The biggest mistake is treating it like a general-purpose DevOps solution. I would advise others that Bitrise is best used for its intended mobile focus, and this approach saves you time. I would rate this product a seven out of ten.

    Nayan Bhut

    Drag and drop workflows have streamlined iphone build, test, and app store deployment

    Reviewed on Apr 30, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is for iPhone CI/CD and App Store Connect build deployment.

    I am using Bitrise for iPhone CI/CD and App Store Connect to take a Git clone, create a build, deploy to the App Store, and send a push notification to the teams that the build is uploaded and it is in review.

    I am using the Xcode build, which is really working great for me in Bitrise.

    What is most valuable?

    The best feature of Bitrise is that it gives a drag and drop interface, so you don't need to code in the YAML, making it very easy compared to other platforms.

    The drag-and-drop feature helps my workflow because I just have to select which tool I want to use. For example, if I want to add the test cases, I can search for test cases, and if that is available, I can directly drag and drop it in my current workflow above or below a specific other task, and then I just have to add the input parameters. In contrast, with a YAML file, I have to add all the data and read the documentation, but with drag and drop, it is easy.

    Bitrise has positively impacted my organization by helping me reduce time by around 50% or more while I am using it for my personal project.

    Bitrise saves me time mainly in building, testing, and deployment because I don't have to use my own machine to check the data or change the branch for that.

    What needs improvement?

    Currently, I haven't found any features in Bitrise that can be improved, but related to Xcode, they need some extra tools that are available in the market, or they have to give specific errors, which are currently hard to find when there is so much log.

    They need to add some extra documentation for how to use the parameters, such as variables, where to add them, and how to use them below the workflow.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for around five years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is very stable in my experience.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Bitrise's scalability is fine for my needs as of now, and I see no need to change anything.

    How are customer service and support?

    I have used the community support for Bitrise, and it is great. I haven't reached out to customer support.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Bitrise is the first one I have used, and I haven't used any other solutions.

    What was our ROI?

    I can see a return on investment with Bitrise, but since I am using the free tier, I don't have any idea about the pricing and those things.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing for Bitrise would be good, but I haven't used that because I am using the free tier.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    Before choosing Bitrise, I haven't evaluated other options.

    What other advice do I have?

    I chose eight out of 10 because currently, it is easy for me, but there is some documentation missing, and also related to iOS development, there are some use cases that are not in the support portal, so I have to find it out by myself. On a scale of 1 to 10, I would rate Bitrise an eight.

    reviewer2817702

    Continuous QA builds have streamlined testing workflows and provide clear logs for faster fixes

    Reviewed on Apr 17, 2026
    Review provided by PeerSpot

    What is our primary use case?

    My main use case for Bitrise is to generate QA of our mobile app so our team can test it. A typical day for me includes working on a feature, doing the tasks I have to do, and when I finish, I generate the QA with Bitrise and send it to the testers.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features Bitrise offers, in my opinion, are the QA itself, the artifact it generates, and the log, which makes it very simple to know what step we got an error or the log for the error, so we know what we have to do to fix it.

    The logs help us significantly; for example, if we generate a QA for Android and iOS, and if a specific step for Android fails, I can look at the log and see exactly what step we got an error, and with this log, we can find out what went wrong.

    Bitrise has positively impacted our organization by improving release speed.

    What needs improvement?

    I think Bitrise could be improved if it was easier to generate Android QA and iOS at the same time.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been working in my current field for about five years.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    I think Bitrise is stable, and I do not remember having any problem with stability.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    I think Bitrise's scalability is very good.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Bitrise was the first and only solution we used; I did not previously use a different solution before Bitrise.

    What other advice do I have?

    I would advise others looking into using Bitrise to start using it; it is a very good tool. There is no other relationship between my company and this vendor other than being a customer. I give Bitrise an overall rating of 8.

    Mansoor-Mohammed

    Weekly mobile releases have become reliable and pipeline incidents have dropped dramatically

    Reviewed on Mar 26, 2026
    Review from a verified AWS customer

    What is our primary use case?

    Our primary use case for Bitrise is that we adopted it as our end-to-end mobile CI/CD platform for both iOS and Android applications. As an SRE, I was tasked to migrate the mobile build pipelines away from the fragile Jenkins setup. Bitrise now handles automated unit and UI testing, code signing, artifact packaging, and the deployment to Firebase distributions for internal testing. We used to run about 80 to 100 pipelines, around 80 to 100 builds per day, and those were across different Git repositories. We consolidated it into a single application, which was Bitrise.

    What is most valuable?

    The best features which I appreciated about Bitrise was the easy drag-and-drop of pipeline editors. Even a non-technical person could understand it. Bitrise handles the headache of iOS signing, code signing, and certificate provisioning profiles automatically.

    Bitrise also catches flaky tests over time so we know which tests are reliable and which are unreliable. The code signing automation of Bitrise has saved a lot of our time. Earlier, things which used to take weeks, now have reduced to days.

    The impact of Bitrise in our organization is that prior to Bitrise, mobile releases happened every two weeks or were frequently delayed by build environment issues, code signing feature failures, or manual steps that fell through the cracks. Within three months of going live on Bitrise, we moved to weekly releases, and now we have a reliable hotfix pipeline that can ship a production build within 45 minutes to an hour of a fix being merged. For me especially, the reduction of pipeline-related incidents has been the biggest win.

    We used to see two to three system build failures per week earlier, and after implementing Bitrise, the number went close to zero. The reproducibility of a clean build environment has eliminated that entire category of failures.

    What needs improvement?

    The improvement I would suggest for Bitrise is that the cost is significantly the friction point. Mac build machines are considerably more expensive than Linux equivalents. As our team has grown, the monthly bills have scaled accordingly with limited room to optimize without reducing concurrency. The self-hosted runner option was evaluated as a potential cost-saving measure, but the documentation and tooling for it are still less mature than the cloud product.

    Build debugging remains a log parsing exercise. There is no interactive debugging session or live SSH access into a failing build environment, which would be a meaningful productive improvement. The analytics dashboard is very minimal and basic and lacks the depth that anyone would want for capacity planning and trend analysis.

    For how long have I used the solution?

    I have been using Bitrise for around a year and a half.

    What do I think about the stability of the solution?

    Bitrise is pretty much stable.

    What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

    Bitrise's scalability is strong. The cloud infrastructure has been highly scalable across two years of heavy use. We have experienced fewer than five incidents or four incidents of elevated queue times. In each case, Bitrise communicated proactively through their status page. Scaling to accommodate a new app or higher build concurrency has required zero infrastructure work on our part. The platform abstracts all capacity management, which aligns well with our team's approach. The only scalability challenge is economic rather than technical. Adding capacity comes with a proportional increase in cost, with no volume discount available to us on the enterprise plan.

    How are customer service and support?

    The customer support and services on the enterprise plan are solid. The response times are fast, and the support engineers demonstrate genuine technical depth. They understand mobile build toolchain, code signing internals, and CI/CD architecture, not just the Bitrise product surface. We had two urgent support incidents during release-critical build failures, and both were resolved within an hour or two with clear communication throughout. The documentation is comprehensive for standard use cases. The community, such as Slack and the GitHub issue thread for individual steps, are also useful supplementary resources for dealing with edge cases.

    Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

    Earlier, we used to do it manually with our team. We didn't have any platform for this, and then we got introduced to Bitrise. It helped us tremendously.

    How was the initial setup?

    The migration process from Jenkins to Bitrise was smooth. I obtained documents online and it was straightforward.

    What about the implementation team?

    We used AWS as our cloud provider.

    What was our ROI?

    We did see a return on investment with Bitrise. It saved a lot of time for us, and in the tech business, time saved is equally proportional to money saved.

    What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

    My experience with Bitrise pricing, setup cost, and licensing was good. The pricing point was a pinch point for us, but the rest was good. We didn't face any challenges. The overall experience was positive for us.

    Which other solutions did I evaluate?

    For those who have the use case of reducing the timeline and getting automated builds, Bitrise would be a very good investment.

    What other advice do I have?

    Bitrise reduced our pain point, which was the release process. Earlier, we used to have a two to three week gap, and then we would still face further delays. After Bitrise, that was resolved, and a huge time saving was realized for us. The overall review rating I would give to Bitrise is an 8 out of 10.

    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?