SaaS on the Beach Returns to Barcelona with a Founder-Only Format
April 11, 2026 – 8:38 am
As the tech conference circuit grows more crowded, one SaaS event is making the opposite pitch: fewer people, fewer sales decks, and a lot less noise.
SaaS on the Beach, a curated event for SaaS founders, will return to Barcelona between May 20 and 21 for its second edition, positioning itself as an alternative to the large-scale trade shows that have long dominated the tech events circuit.
The event is built on selectivity. Attendance is limited to 60 handpicked founders, with participants required to meet specific criteria before they can buy a ticket. That makes SaaS on the Beach feel less like an open industry conference and more like a tightly edited peer group.
It is also stripping out many of the rituals that now define mainstream tech events. There is no exhibition hall, no sponsored speaker circuit, and no sales-pitch-heavy programming. In their place are seated dinners, roundtable discussions, and social activities meant to create more direct, less performative exchanges between attendees.
That matters because many founders no longer need more stage content. They need rooms where people speak plainly, compare notes honestly, and talk about the less polished parts of building software companies, hiring, churn, growth, product decisions, and what is actually working.
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SaaS on the Beach is also leaning into a no-solicitation format, an explicit break from the conference model where networking often blurs into prospecting. The promise here is that people come to learn from peers, not to be cornered into a demo.
Barcelona is part of that pitch too. The event is presenting its Mediterranean setting as an alternative to the usual northern European conference loop, betting that a more relaxed environment can lead to better conversations.
The bigger idea behind SaaS on the Beach is that senior operators may be growing less interested in scale for its own sake. The trade show still has its place, especially for visibility and lead generation, but smaller, curated gatherings are increasingly selling something else: relevance.
That does not make them more democratic. In some ways, it makes them more exclusive. But it does make the value proposition clearer. If the standard conference model is built on volume, events like SaaS on the Beach are built on density, fewer people, more overlap, and a better chance that the conversation is worth having.
That is the model returning to Barcelona this May.
Story by:
Ana-Maria Stanciuc
Editor-in-Chief
I am the Editor in Chief for TNW, covering technology not as a parade of launches and valuations, but as a system of influence, persuasion,