
July 1, 2026 · 8:37 AM
ToneAdapt Hit $35K MRR. Pricing Is Missing.
Kyan Santiago’s ToneAdapt is a solo iOS app disclosed at $35K MRR, but the case is strongest as an acquisition teardown — not a complete pricing or funnel playbook.
ToneAdapt is the strongest qualifying indie case this week, but not because the public record gives a complete playbook. Kyan Santiago disclosed on June 21 that the iOS app had gone from "$0/mo → $35K/mo," and the same public trail says ToneAdapt was up from $25K in May. 1 The case clears the filter: a public MRR disclosure above $10K, a solo founder profile, and a product old enough to avoid the one-week-viral-spike bucket. 1
The useful part is narrower than the headline. ToneAdapt looks like a distribution-first iOS app case: Apple Search Ads are working, TikTok is part of the motion, Kyan is talking to users, and the founder is building in public. 2 The missing part is just as important: public materials reviewed for this case do not disclose pricing tiers, customer count, retention, conversion rate, payback period, or MRR by channel. That means this is not a complete pricing teardown. It is a case study in what can be learned from a fast-growing app when the founder shares revenue momentum but not the full funnel.
Snapshot box
| Field | Public status |
|---|---|
| Product | ToneAdapt, an iOS app associated with music/guitar players. 1 |
| Founder | Kyan Santiago, a 21-year-old solo founder in San Diego. 1 |
| MRR | $35K/month as disclosed on June 21, 2026; up from $25K in May 2026. 1 |
| Team size | Solo, based on the public founder profile. 1 |
| Product age | Likely about 7-9 months old, with the founder account created in September 2025 and ToneAdapt treated as a late-2025 launch. 1 |
| Pricing tiers | Not publicly disclosed in the available public materials. |
| Customer count | Not publicly disclosed. |
| Churn / retention | Not publicly disclosed. |
| Current growth signal | Kyan posted on June 30 that paid ads were "RIPPING," that a first $2K day was close, and that he was targeting at least $50K in July. 2 He posted on July 1 that he had reached his first $3,000 day. 3 |
The snapshot already tells the story. The revenue line is strong. The operating details are thin. A founder copying the headline without knowing the pricing, ad spend, trial conversion, or retention would be copying a silhouette.
Origin: the public pain is only partly visible
ToneAdapt's public positioning ties the product to guitar players and music learning, and Kyan's public profile frames the app as his main iOS business. 1 The public record reviewed for this case does not include a clean founder quote explaining the original personal pain in the way some indie founders do: "I had this exact problem, built the first version for myself, and users pulled it from there." So the origin section has to stay disciplined.
What can be said: ToneAdapt appears to sit in a consumer learning niche where the user already has an emotional reason to improve. Guitar is not a back-office utility category. It is habit, identity, taste, frustration, and progress tracking all mixed together. That matters because consumer subscription apps need a reason to be opened repeatedly. A music-learning product has a plausible daily-use surface if the app helps a player practice, adapt, or improve something they already care about.
What cannot be said: there is no public evidence in the available materials that Kyan struggled with a specific guitar-learning workflow, validated a particular practice problem before building, or pulled the product from a pre-existing community of guitar students. Those may be true. They are not public. The difference matters because many case studies quietly turn a category fit into an origin myth. This one should not.
The safer read is that ToneAdapt found a consumer niche where the founder could combine product iteration with performance marketing. The personal-pain story is not the evidence base. The revenue disclosures and acquisition comments are.
Wedge: not "better UX," but a consumer app with measurable distribution
ToneAdapt's public wedge is less about a visible product feature and more about the growth system around the app. Kyan publicly described the setup that took ToneAdapt from $0/month to $35K/month and paired that disclosure with the move out of his college house. 1 He later said paid ads were back and "RIPPING," and he tied that momentum to a near-$2K day and a $50K+ July target. 2
That is not enough to prove the product has a durable feature moat. It is enough to show that ToneAdapt has a performance-marketing loop that was working at the time of disclosure. In app-store businesses, that is a meaningful wedge by itself. If Apple Search Ads can acquire users profitably, the product does not need every sale to come from founder personality or viral content. Paid intent can become the testing ground: keyword, creative, onboarding, paywall, price, retention, repeat.
The second wedge is the content channel. Kyan's public comments attribute growth to TikTok content, talking to users, and building in public. 2 That combination is not exotic. The exact ordering is the point. TikTok can create cheap attention. User conversations can improve the product and paywall. Apple Search Ads can buy intent once the offer is converting. Building in public gives the founder a peer audience, but the buyer is probably not another indie hacker. The buyer is the guitar player.
That distinction keeps the analysis honest. A founder selling a tool to other founders can convert build-in-public followers directly. ToneAdapt, as a music/guitar app, likely converts a different audience. The founder's public persona may help with credibility and talent attraction, but the app still needs channels that reach musicians. TikTok and Apple Search Ads fit that better than founder Twitter alone.
The wedge, then, is not "AI for guitar" or "better design." The public evidence supports a narrower statement: ToneAdapt appears to have found a consumer-app category where short-form content and paid app-store intent can be tested quickly, and where the founder is iterating in public while revenue responds.
Pricing teardown: the most important fields are not public
The pricing teardown starts with an uncomfortable sentence: ToneAdapt's available public materials do not disclose the current pricing tiers. That blocks several questions a serious operator would normally ask.
A real pricing teardown would need at least five fields:
| Pricing question | Public answer |
|---|---|
| What are the tiers? | Not publicly disclosed. |
| Is the model weekly, monthly, annual, or lifetime? | Not publicly disclosed. |
| Is there a free trial or freemium mode? | Not publicly disclosed. |
| What is the anchor tier? | Not publicly disclosed. |
| What mechanism drives upgrades? | Not publicly disclosed. |
This is not a small omission. Consumer iOS subscription revenue can look impressive while hiding very different businesses underneath. A $35K MRR app could be driven by high-volume low-price subscriptions, a small base of annual plans, aggressive trial starts, strong organic retention, or paid acquisition that works only while creative fatigue stays low. Those are different businesses. The public MRR number alone does not tell which one ToneAdapt is.
The June 30 and July 1 posts do give one clue: daily revenue was accelerating, with Kyan pointing to a first $2K day and then reporting a first $3,000 day. 2 3 That makes paid acquisition economics the key missing variable. If a $3,000 day came with a healthy payback period, the story is strong. If it required unusually high spend, the MRR headline is less informative.
No public evidence in the available materials gives cost per install, trial-start rate, paid conversion, refund rate, or day-30 retention. So the only honest conclusion is bounded: ToneAdapt has publicly disclosed strong revenue momentum, but the public record does not yet allow a reader to copy the pricing architecture.
A solo founder should treat that as a warning, not a reason to ignore the case. The lesson is to separate revenue proof from unit-economics proof. Kyan has shared the former. He has not publicly shared enough to prove the latter.
Acquisition channels: paid ads, TikTok, users, and public building
ToneAdapt's acquisition story has more public support than its pricing story.
First, Apple Search Ads appear to be the current accelerant. Kyan wrote that "Paid ads are back and RIPPING" and connected that to a near-$2K day and a $50K+ July target. 2 For a consumer iOS app, this matters because Apple Search Ads sit near the moment of intent. A user searching inside the App Store is already looking for a solution, not passively scrolling past a founder's update.
Second, TikTok appears to be part of the growth mix. Kyan's public growth comments attribute ToneAdapt's traction to TikTok content, user conversations, and building in public. 2 TikTok is a plausible channel for a guitar app because the product can be shown through sound, before/after improvement, practice clips, and musician identity. That does not prove any single video drove revenue. It does mean the medium fits the category.
Third, talking to users is probably the least glamorous and most replicable part. Kyan's public growth narrative includes talking to all users. 2 In a consumer app, that can translate into better onboarding, clearer paywall language, sharper creative angles, and fewer fake feature priorities. A founder does not need a large audience to do that. A founder needs the discipline to keep listening after the first revenue screenshots arrive.
Fourth, building in public helps, but it should not be over-credited. The public posts create a record of momentum and attract other builders. They may also help Kyan recruit collaborators, advisors, or affiliate-style supporters later. But the app's paying users are not necessarily founder-Twitter readers. For this case, build-in-public is better understood as a credibility and feedback layer around the business, not as the core customer acquisition channel.
The clean acquisition read is this: ToneAdapt seems to be using short-form content to find demand angles, user conversations to improve the product, and Apple Search Ads to scale intent. That system is replicable in structure. The performance numbers are not yet public enough to copy directly.
Replication checklist
A solo founder trying to copy the useful parts of ToneAdapt should not start with "make a guitar app." That is the wrong abstraction. The checklist is about conditions.
- Pick a consumer niche where the buyer already practices something. Guitar works because practice creates repeated intent. The same logic may apply to language learning, singing, drawing, fitness technique, test prep, or any skill where the user can feel progress.
- Build a product that can be demonstrated in 10 seconds. TikTok does not reward a long product tour. A founder needs a visual or audible before/after, a mistake corrected, or a quick win that a user understands immediately.
- Use user conversations to write the paywall, not just the roadmap. ToneAdapt's public growth story includes talking to users. 2 The monetization lesson is to ask why users hesitate, what outcome they believe they are buying, and what language they use for the pain.
- Test Apple Search Ads only after the funnel has a chance to convert. Kyan's June 30 post says paid ads were working. 2 The unspoken prerequisite is a product page, onboarding flow, and paywall that can turn intent into paid users. Buying traffic before that is a fast way to buy confusion.
- Track daily revenue, but do not worship it. Kyan's first $3,000 day is a useful signal of acceleration. 3 A founder still needs cohort retention, refund behavior, and paid-acquisition payback to know whether the revenue is durable.
- Do not confuse public momentum with private economics. The public can see $35K MRR. 1 The public cannot see the ad account, the App Store conversion funnel, the trial mix, or the churn curve. Copy the process shape, not the implied certainty.
Honest assessment: the unfair advantages
ToneAdapt has several advantages that a cold-start solo founder should not pretend to own.
Kyan is young, public, and unusually willing to share momentum. A 21-year-old solo founder moving from college-house life to full-time app work is a strong public narrative, and Kyan explicitly tied the $35K/month setup reveal to moving out of his college house. 1 That kind of story travels better than a faceless app update.
The product sits in a content-native category. A guitar-related iOS app can be shown through sound, performance, and practice clips. 1 A compliance dashboard or B2B invoicing tool cannot copy that TikTok surface one-for-one.
The public evidence starts after traction, not before it. The strongest public posts are revenue milestones: $35K/month, a near-$2K day, and then a $3,000 day. 1 2 3 The messy early funnel work is not fully visible. That makes the story easy to compress into "make content, run ads, win." The actual path was probably less clean.
Paid acquisition knowledge may be the real edge. Many indie founders can build an app. Fewer can run paid acquisition without lighting money on fire. Kyan's post says paid ads were working, but it does not disclose spend, targeting, creative volume, or payback. 2 If he has learned those mechanics faster than peers, that is a genuine unfair advantage.
The non-replicable part is not magic. It is the combination of category fit, public founder story, paid-acquisition execution, and still-private funnel learning. A reader can copy the structure. A reader cannot copy the hidden data.
Three lessons that generalize
1. A public MRR milestone is not a complete business model. ToneAdapt's $35K/month disclosure is strong evidence of demand. 1 It is not evidence of pricing architecture, retention, or paid-acquisition efficiency. Serious founders separate those claims.
2. Consumer-app distribution needs multiple feedback loops. The public trail points to TikTok content, user conversations, building in public, and Apple Search Ads. 2 The transferable lesson is not any one channel. It is the loop: content finds angles, users refine the offer, paid search scales intent.
3. Unknown fields should change the confidence level, not the lesson. Pricing tiers, customer count, churn, and payback are not public. That does not make ToneAdapt useless as a case. It means the replicable lesson should stay at the level of acquisition architecture and category selection until more data is public.
Sources table
| # | Source | What it supports | URL |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kyan Santiago on X: $0/mo → $35K/mo setup reveal | $35K MRR disclosure, $25K prior MRR context, solo-founder profile, ToneAdapt identification | https://x.com/kyanbuilds/status/2068542117526589834 |
| 2 | Kyan Santiago on X: Paid ads are back and RIPPING | Apple Search Ads momentum, near-$2K day, $50K+ July target, growth-channel comments | https://x.com/kyanbuilds/status/2071815502641639726 |
| 3 | Kyan Santiago on X: My first $3,000 day | July 1 daily revenue acceleration signal | https://x.com/kyanbuilds/status/2072184288158916729 |
Cover image: AI-generated illustration.

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