
Aera Browser is designed to automate web workflows, allowing users to build fully-autonomous tasks directly within their browser. It caters to individuals and teams who need to manage repetitive online activities, enabling them to reclaim time spent on manual tasks. Users can set up workflows to check competitor pricing, scrape leads, and compile reports, all while the browser operates in the background without constant oversight.
Notable features include the ability to schedule tasks, manage long-running workflows, and connect with existing tools via the MCP. Aera provides real-time data acc…
The product is straightforward: create automated workflows directly in the browser, which maps cleanly to an addressable need for task automation. On the business side the company is revenue-stage with paying customers, generating $210 in the last 30 days and maintaining $363 in recurring revenue; that split (MRR > last-30-days revenue) is a signal to investigate billing cadence, churn, or one-time revenue timing. The last-30-day growth of -42% is the clearest red flag — rapid contraction at this stage is material — even though the reported profit margin of 25% suggests unit economics can be positive when volumes stabilize.
Being listed for sale changes the context: this may be an opportunity for an acquirer who can inject distribution or product development muscle, or it may reflect founder exit after an early build. For a founder/builder, the priorities are clear: stop the decline (reverse the --42%), clarify the revenue run rate behind the $363, and document customer acquisition cost and retention. For a potential buyer or investor, the small absolute revenue and negative short-term growth demand close diligence on churn drivers, concentration of customers, and the pathway to re-accelerating adoption.
A judgment from project data — not a user review.