About KiCad Services

Professional Support from KiCad’s Lead Developers

KiCad Services is a California Corporation run by Seth Hillbrand and Wayne Stambaugh, two of the KiCad lead developers.

Solutions for Professional Users

In 2019, the KiCad team initiated a series of conversations with professional KiCad users and PCB fabrication houses about what they needed to support their growth and success with KiCad. KiCad Services Corporation is the result of those conversations.

We are a full-service commercial support corporation, formed with the mission of helping our professional users succeed and thrive with KiCad. We provide private issue reporting, rapid fixes, and online remote desktop support. Additionally, we offer contracted feature development options.

Engineering collaboration

The KiCad Services Team

KiCad Services is led by core developers behind KiCad.

Seth Hillbrand

Seth Hillbrand

Founder & Lead Developer

Seth is an IPC CID-certified design engineer with over two decades of experience in systems design, manufacturing, and testing. His work spans high-frequency electronic warfare countermeasures, low-noise cryogenic readout systems, and high-altitude HF communication relays.

Wayne Stambaugh

Wayne Stambaugh

KiCad Project Lead

Wayne began his career as an electronics engineer in 1986 and spent over 33 years designing products and test equipment across commercial, industrial, aerospace, and transportation industries. He is a largely self-taught software developer with experience in embedded assembly, C, C++, and Python.

Damjan Prerad

Damjan Prerad

KiCad Developer

Damjan is an embedded software engineer with a master's degree in Electronics and Telecommunications and extensive experience in performance-critical embedded systems. His background includes automotive, radar, and edge-AI applications, with a strong emphasis on hardware-aware optimization and Linux-based development.

Work with the Experts Behind KiCad

Contact us today to learn how KiCad Services Corporation can help you escape the limits of closed source software.

Contact Us →