Kuralit is active in the interface and execution layers of the AI agent stack. While many agents are designed to navigate the web like a human (using computer vision or DOM manipulation), Kuralit promotes a more direct integration where the agent interacts with the app via its own APIs to generate a "Generative UI."
This is relevant to the agent ecosystem because it solves the 'last mile' problem of AI: making the AI's output actionable. For developers building agents, Kuralit offers a way to move from agents that merely 'talk' to agents that 'do' within the context of a native mobile or web application. It champions the idea that the future of software isn't just agents living in a separate chat window, but agents that fundamentally reorganize the UI of the apps we already use.
Most current AI integrations follow a predictable pattern: a user types a query, and a chatbot returns a block of text. If a user asks a typical support bot about their order status, the bot might provide a tracking number or explain where to find the 'My Orders' section. Kuralit is built on the premise that this is an inefficient bridge between intent and action. Instead of text instructions, the company provides a framework for what it calls Conversational Adaptive UI. When a user asks a question, the interface itself changes to show the relevant data or provide the specific button needed to complete a task.
Based in Chennai, India, and founded by Barveen Kumar, Kuralit acts as a translation layer between natural language and a company's existing application logic. It does not replace the app's backend; rather, it sits on top of it. When an intent is detected—such as a request to filter products or check out—Kuralit calls the relevant APIs and renders a functional UI component. This approach is often referred to in the industry as Generative UI, where the interface is not hard-coded but is assembled dynamically based on the conversation's context.
Kuralit focuses heavily on the mobile experience, where screen real estate is limited and navigating complex menus is a friction point. The company describes its technology as a "voice-first execution layer." In practice, this means a user can tell an e-commerce app to "only show items under $150" or "add one to my cart," and the app responds by updating the view or the cart state immediately.
This method addresses a common criticism of AI agents: the reliability gap. By mapping natural language directly to internal API functions and state changes, Kuralit reduces the hallucination risk inherent in agents that simply browse the web or guess how to navigate a GUI. The company's demos showcase integrations with retail environments, including product searches and checkout flows, where the AI serves as the primary interface rather than a secondary support feature.
The market for Generative UI is early, and Kuralit sits in a niche between traditional UI/UX design tools and autonomous AI agents. While companies like OpenAI and Google provide the reasoning engines, Kuralit provides the plumbing required to make those engines functional within a proprietary mobile app. They are part of a growing movement to bypass traditional navigation entirely, treating natural language as the primary entry point for software interaction.
Kuralit remains a small, founder-led team, currently offering live demos and founder consultations rather than a self-serve platform. Their roadmap suggests a shift toward more standardized SDKs and documentation to allow developers to implement these adaptive views without manual configuration for every possible user intent.
An interface layer for mobile and web apps that converts natural language into functional UI components and API actions.
Kuralit is hiring.