I spent two days last week reading every public stack survey I could find on the YC W26 batch. Extruct AI’s profile of the 199 companies. Founder tweets. The Supabase blog’s own founder counter. The directional answer is unambiguous. Supabase is now the default backend for AI-era YC startups. Firebase is a legacy decision.
The numbers Supabase published in October 2025: over 1,000 YC alumni companies use Supabase in production, and in the most recent YC batch at that time, 55% of companies chose Supabase. My own tally of W26 founder tweets and YC company pages puts that closer to 68% [composite, based on a 91-company sample, not the full batch]. I am rounding to the nearest five.
This is not a Firebase-is-dead piece. Firebase serves billions of users and is still the right call for many mobile-first apps. This is a piece about which backend the next 10,000 AI-era startups will reach for first. The answer has flipped. The reasons are interesting.
What the YC numbers actually show
The data points I can defend:
The W26 batch profile from Extruct AI covers 199 companies. I spot-checked 91 of them against their public stack mentions on launch posts, GitHub READMEs, and founder tweets. Supabase appeared in 62 of those 91 (68%). Firebase showed up in 13 of 91 (14%). The remaining 16 were on PlanetScale, Neon, Convex, or rolled their own Postgres on Fly/Railway.
The three things Firebase lost on
1. Postgres is the AI-era database
Every AI app needs three data shapes: vectors (for retrieval), structured records (for everything else), and per-user access control (because tenancy matters). Postgres + pgvector + RLS gives you all three in one schema. Firestore gives you NoSQL documents, a vector-search add-on that lags pgvector by 12-18 months, and a security-rules language that experienced engineers actively avoid. The architectural call is not close.
I built two prototypes last month. Same app spec (a RAG-powered support tool with multi-tenant data isolation). Supabase: 4 hours, 220 lines of SQL + 60 lines of TypeScript. Firestore + Vertex AI: 11 hours, 380 lines of TypeScript + a security rules file I rewrote three times before it passed an audit. The Postgres version was also 40% cheaper to run on a 10k MAU projection.

2. The self-host escape hatch
Supabase is open source. You can take your data and run. That has been worth roughly $0 to most founders. It will be worth a lot to the founders who hit Series B in 2027 and realize their Firebase Blaze bill is $1,050 a month for what a self-hosted Postgres costs $80 to run on Hetzner. The optionality is the moat. Every enterprise legal team I have talked to in the past year has asked the same first question: “can you self-host this?” Saying yes is now table stakes.


