Series A Funding: What It Takes and Whether You Should Raise

Series A Funding: What It Takes and Whether You Should Raise - hero image

Most founders chase Series A fund­ing as a tro­phy — proof they’ve “made it.” That fram­ing will cost you. A Series A is not a grad­u­a­tion cer­e­mo­ny; it’s a deci­sion to sell a fifth of your com­pa­ny in exchange for fuel to scale some­thing you’ve already proven works. If the machine isn’t proven yet, the round does­n’t accel­er­ate growth — it accel­er­ates how fast and how expen­sive­ly you make mis­takes.

I’ve advised SaaS founders for about 30 years, and here’s the part the stan­dard fundrais­ing play­book skips: for the kind of B2B SaaS com­pa­ny most of you are build­ing — boot­strapped or light­ly fund­ed, $2M to $15M in Annu­al Recur­ring Rev­enue (ARR), aimed at a $25M to $100M+ exit — Series A fund­ing is often the wrong tool, even when you can get it. Ven­ture cap­i­tal has one game plan, and it rarely match­es the game you’re actu­al­ly play­ing. That does­n’t make a Series A wrong. It means you have to under­stand exact­ly what the round demands, what it takes from you, and whether a cheap­er path gets you the same place.

This guide cov­ers what Series A fund­ing actu­al­ly is, the rev­enue bar you have to clear to raise one, what it costs you in own­er­ship, the kinds of investors writ­ing the checks and how their incen­tives dif­fer from yours, and — the part that mat­ters most — how to decide whether to raise at all.

What Is Series A Funding?

Series A fund­ing is the first large, priced round of insti­tu­tion­al ven­ture cap­i­tal a start­up rais­es, typ­i­cal­ly after a small­er seed round and once the com­pa­ny has ear­ly rev­enue and clear signs that its prod­uct works. “Priced” means the round sets a firm val­u­a­tion: the investor and the com­pa­ny agree on what the busi­ness is worth today, and the investor buys new­ly issued shares at that price. That’s a mean­ing­ful shift from the seed stage, where mon­ey often comes in through instru­ments that delay set­ting a price.

Here’s how the cap­i­tal stages line up over the life of a com­pa­ny:

StageTypical SourceWhat It FundsWhat Investors Expect
Pre-seedFounder savings, friends and family, credit cardsBuild the first version, get a few customersA working idea and a committed founder
SeedAngel investors, seed-stage VC firmsReach product-market fit, build the core teamEarly revenue and retention signals
Series AVenture capitalScale a proven go-to-market motionRepeatable, growing revenue (~$1M–$3M ARR)
Series B and beyondVenture capital, growth equityPour fuel on an accelerating businessStrong growth and a widening market lead
Late / ExitPrivate equity, strategic acquirersCash out founders, fund a transitionA durable, lower-risk business

The seed round buys you the time to find prod­uct-mar­ket fit — the point where cus­tomers reli­ably want what you’ve built and stay. Series A fund­ing is sup­posed to come after you’ve found it, when the ques­tion shifts from “does this work?” to “how fast can we make it big­ger?” That sequence is the whole point, and most founders who strug­gle to raise a Series A are real­ly strug­gling because they’re try­ing to raise it before they’ve earned the answer to the first ques­tion.

One struc­tur­al note that trips up boot­strapped founders: com­pa­nies that intend to raise insti­tu­tion­al ven­ture cap­i­tal almost always con­vert from an LLC to a C cor­po­ra­tion before the round, because that’s the enti­ty struc­ture ven­ture investors require. If you’ve been run­ning as an LLC, fac­tor the con­ver­sion — and its tax and legal com­plex­i­ty — into your time­line well before you start pitch­ing.

startup funding stages — An abstract ascending staircase made of stacked translucent

The Series A Bar: What You Actually Need to Raise

The sin­gle biggest mis­con­cep­tion about Series A fund­ing is that a com­pelling sto­ry and a slick deck get it done. At the seed stage, a sto­ry can be enough. At Series A, investors are buy­ing evi­dence. The sto­ry has to be backed by num­bers that prove the busi­ness works and is repeat­able.

For a B2B SaaS com­pa­ny, the rough bar to raise a Series A is $1M to $3M in ARR, grow­ing fast, with reten­tion strong enough that the rev­enue you’ve built does­n’t leak back out. That’s not a hard cut­off — a com­pa­ny at $800K ARR grow­ing 15% month over month with near-zero churn may clear it, while a com­pa­ny at $2M ARR that’s flat and bleed­ing cus­tomers won’t. But it’s the right men­tal anchor.

What investors are real­ly under­writ­ing at Series A is repeata­bil­i­ty, not size. They want to see that you’ve moved past founder-dri­ven, one-off deals into some­thing that looks like a sys­tem:

  1. A repeat­able go-to-mar­ket motion. You can describe how a cus­tomer goes from nev­er hav­ing heard of you to pay­ing, and you can do it again pre­dictably — not just when the founder per­son­al­ly clos­es the deal.
  2. Unit eco­nom­ics that sup­port scal­ing. The life­time val­ue of a cus­tomer com­fort­ably exceeds what it costs to acquire one, and you recov­er that acqui­si­tion cost in a rea­son­able win­dow. Strong SaaS unit eco­nom­ics are what tell an investor that pour­ing mon­ey in pro­duces growth, not just a big­ger loss.
  3. Reten­tion that holds. Net rev­enue reten­tion near or above 100% means the rev­enue base grows on its own before you add a sin­gle new cus­tomer. Weak reten­tion is the fastest way to kill a Series A con­ver­sa­tion — investors know you can’t reduce SaaS churn after the round if you could­n’t before it.
  4. A mar­ket big enough to mat­ter. Ven­ture investors need the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a very large out­come. A great busi­ness in a small mar­ket is a fine com­pa­ny and a poor ven­ture bet.

Notice what’s under­neath all four: the same met­rics you’d track to run the busi­ness well are the met­rics that qual­i­fy you for a Series A. There’s no sep­a­rate “fundrais­ing prep” that sub­sti­tutes for actu­al­ly build­ing a healthy com­pa­ny. If your SaaS met­rics are strong, the round gets eas­i­er. If they’re weak, no deck saves you. (For inde­pen­dent bench­marks on what growth and reten­tion num­bers sep­a­rate the com­pa­nies that raise from the ones that don’t, Open­View’s SaaS bench­marks are a use­ful real­i­ty check against your own.)

A note on the num­bers through­out this guide: Series A round sizes, val­u­a­tions, and dilu­tion per­cent­ages move with the mar­ket. The fig­ures here are illus­tra­tive and reflect con­di­tions at the time of writ­ing. They’re includ­ed to show the rela­tion­ships between the round size, the val­u­a­tion, and your own­er­ship — not as cur­rent mar­ket quotes. Ver­i­fy live bench­marks before you nego­ti­ate.

How Much Series A Funding Should You Raise?

The wrong way to size a round is to pick a num­ber that sounds impres­sive or to match what a com­peti­tor announced on a press release. Announced round sizes are van­i­ty met­rics; what mat­ters is whether the cap­i­tal moves you to the next mile­stone with mar­gin to spare.

The right way is bot­tom-up. Fig­ure out what it costs to reach the mile­stone that jus­ti­fies a Series B — mean­ing­ful­ly larg­er, faster-grow­ing rev­enue — then add a cush­ion so you’re nev­er rais­ing the next round from a posi­tion of weak­ness. (Y Com­bi­na­tor’s guide to seed fundrais­ing makes the same struc­tur­al point one stage ear­li­er: raise enough to reach a mean­ing­ful mile­stone, plus a mar­gin of safe­ty.)

Here’s a sim­pli­fied worked exam­ple for a SaaS com­pa­ny at $1.5M ARR, grow­ing but burn­ing cash, aim­ing to reach rough­ly $6M ARR over a 24-month plan.

Line ItemMonthly24 Months
Gross cash burn (team, sales and marketing, tools, hosting)$400,000$9,600,000
Less: gross profit from existing revenue (80% margin on $1.5M ARR ≈ $125K MRR × 80%)$100,000$2,400,000
Net monthly burn$300,000$7,200,000
Plus: 6-month closing cushion (so you never raise out of desperation)$1,800,000
Suggested raise≈ $9M

Walk through the log­ic. The busi­ness spends $400K a month to chase growth but earns about $100K a month in gross prof­it from its exist­ing $1.5M ARR (at an 80% gross mar­gin). That nets to $300K of true month­ly burn. Over a 24-month plan to reach $6M ARR, that’s about $7.2M. Then add rough­ly six months of extra cush­ion — about $1.8M — so that when you go to raise your Series B, you do it with mon­ey still in the bank and the free­dom to walk away from a bad term sheet. Total: a Series A of about $9M.

That cush­ion is not option­al padding. It’s the most impor­tant line in the table, and the rea­son is lever­age: the only time you have any is when you don’t need the mon­ey. Size the round so that’s still true when the next raise comes around. Before you ever pitch, build this math into a real SaaS finan­cial mod­el so you can show an investor exact­ly what their cap­i­tal buys — and so you know your own cash run­way cold.

The Real Cost of Series A Funding: Compounding Dilution

Every dol­lar of Series A fund­ing costs you a piece of your com­pa­ny. That’s the trade, and it’s a fair one when the cap­i­tal gen­uine­ly accel­er­ates a proven busi­ness. The mis­take founders make is treat­ing dilu­tion as a one-time event instead of a com­pound­ing one.

Start with the sin­gle-round math. Sup­pose you raise a $9M Series A at a $36M post-mon­ey val­u­a­tion. The investor gets:

Own­er­ship Sold = Amount Raised / Post-Mon­ey Val­u­a­tion = $9M / $36M = 25%

So you’ve hand­ed over a quar­ter of the com­pa­ny in one round. That might be fine — if it were the only dilu­tion you ever took. But Series A fund­ing almost nev­er stands alone. It com­mits you to a path: once you’re on the ven­ture track, the expec­ta­tion is that you keep rais­ing. Watch what hap­pens to founder own­er­ship across a typ­i­cal financ­ing path, start­ing from the seed round and assum­ing the found­ing team began own­ing 100%:

RoundOwnership SoldFounder Ownership After
Start100%
Seed20%80%
Series A25%60%
Series B18%49.2%
Option pool top-ups + a down-round provision triggering~12%~43%

By the time you’ve raised through a Series B and topped up the employ­ee option pool, you can eas­i­ly be below half own­er­ship — and that’s the good sce­nario where every­thing goes accord­ing to plan. Each round mul­ti­plies against what you have left: 80% × 75% × 82% × 88% ≈ 43%. Dilu­tion com­pounds exact­ly the way churn and reten­tion com­pound — mul­ti­plica­tive­ly, not by sim­ple sub­trac­tion. Sub­tract­ing the per­cent­ages (20 + 25 + 18 + 12 = 75, leav­ing 25%) gives the wrong answer; the real fig­ure is high­er because each round only takes its slice of the remain­ing equi­ty.

And the smooth path is not the one to plan for. In the real world, stuff hap­pens — a bad econ­o­my, a pan­dem­ic, a reg­u­la­to­ry shift, a key cus­tomer churns. When you’re high­ly depen­dent on out­side cap­i­tal and not finan­cial­ly self-sus­tain­ing, the down-side pro­vi­sions the attor­neys argued over kick in exact­ly when things go wrong, trans­fer­ring even more equi­ty to the investor to keep them whole through a down round. I’ve watched founders build com­pa­nies worth sev­er­al hun­dred mil­lion dol­lars and walk away with almost noth­ing because of com­pound­ing dilu­tion and down-round terms. I’ve also seen founders sell for $200M — not a uni­corn — and per­son­al­ly keep $100M, because they raised lit­tle and kept con­trol. The dif­fer­ence was rarely the qual­i­ty of the busi­ness. It was the cap table.

Decision tree guiding whether a SaaS founder should raise a Series A, pursue growth equity or debt, or stay bootstrapped — Decision tree for raising a Series A

The Investors Writing Series A Checks — and Why Their Goals Aren’t Yours

“Investor” is not one thing. The mon­ey behind a Series A is almost always insti­tu­tion­al ven­ture cap­i­tal, and it comes with a very spe­cif­ic world­view that you need to under­stand before you take a dol­lar of it. There are four investor types you’ll encounter across the full life of a com­pa­ny, and three of them are pro­fes­sion­al, insti­tu­tion­al mon­ey with fun­da­men­tal­ly dif­fer­ent goals.

Venture Capital

Ven­ture cap­i­tal is insti­tu­tion­al mon­ey with a delib­er­ate, repeat­able strat­e­gy: invest in com­pa­nies that can become mega-win­ners. A VC firm is per­fect­ly hap­py to have nine of ten invest­ments go to zero as long as the tenth becomes a cat­e­go­ry-defin­ing giant. The whole approach is sum­ma­rized by an old say­ing — “go big or go home.” They want a bil­lion-dol­lar out­come or a bank­rupt­cy. What they explic­it­ly do not want is a com­fort­able, prof­itable, mid-sized com­pa­ny — “a mil­lion­aire in the mid­dle.” That has three con­se­quences you have to inter­nal­ize before you raise a Series A:

  1. Mis­aligned incen­tives. Most SaaS founders I work with want a prof­itable busi­ness they can sell, per­son­al­ly cap­tur­ing most of the val­ue they built. VCs want max­i­mum growth and mar­ket share, often at a sus­tained loss for years. Those are not the same goal, and the gap shows up in every major deci­sion — how fast to spend, when to chase a new mar­ket, whether to take prof­itabil­i­ty seri­ous­ly.
  2. Depen­dence on more cap­i­tal. The ven­ture play­book is grow fast, lose mon­ey, come back for more. Each time you come back, the round is larg­er, and they take more own­er­ship and more con­trol.
  3. Exces­sive dilu­tion and lost con­trol. Con­stant rais­ing means your own­er­ship falls and falls, and the board and gov­er­nance terms grad­u­al­ly shift pow­er away from you. Under per­fect con­di­tions, that’s tol­er­a­ble. In the real world, the pro­tec­tive pro­vi­sions trans­fer even more to the investor when con­di­tions sour.

Ven­ture cap­i­tal gen­uine­ly fits a nar­row set of cas­es — a high­ly dis­rup­tive tech­nol­o­gy chas­ing a mar­ket so large it may not even clear­ly exist yet, the way search engines did­n’t real­ly exist before Google. That’s the clas­sic VC deal, and “go big or go home” is the right strat­e­gy for it. It’s far less com­mon than the vol­ume of fundrais­ing head­lines would sug­gest.

Growth Equity

Growth equi­ty investors back com­pa­nies that are fun­da­men­tal­ly prof­itable, or could be, and want to grow faster. They tar­get some­thing like a 300% return over a cou­ple of years — not a moon­shot — and they explic­it­ly don’t want you run­ning at a per­ma­nent loss or becom­ing depen­dent on out­side cap­i­tal. In my expe­ri­ence, most SaaS founders are far bet­ter aligned with growth equi­ty than with ven­ture cap­i­tal. Growth equi­ty usu­al­ly shows up after the busi­ness is clear­ly work­ing, some­times in place of a lat­er ven­ture round, and the align­ment of their goals with yours is much clos­er.

Angel Investors

Angel investors are indi­vid­u­als — often peo­ple the founder knows — who put mon­ey in ear­ly, fre­quent­ly at the seed stage before a Series A is on the table. They’re usu­al­ly not active man­agers and not chas­ing a fund’s return tar­gets, which often makes them the most founder-aligned cap­i­tal you’ll ever take. By the Series A, the round is typ­i­cal­ly led by an insti­tu­tion­al firm, but angels from your seed round often par­tic­i­pate again.

Private Equity

Pri­vate equi­ty typ­i­cal­ly arrives much lat­er, when you’re ready to sell some or all of your shares. Here’s the key dis­tinc­tion worth burn­ing into mem­o­ry: a growth equi­ty or ven­ture check goes into the com­pa­ny’s bank account to fund growth, while a pri­vate equi­ty check can go into your per­son­al bank account to buy your shares. Pri­vate equi­ty is how many SaaS founders get their actu­al liq­uid­i­ty event. For the deep­er com­par­i­son of who buys com­pa­nies and why, see strate­gic vs. finan­cial buy­ers.

The prac­ti­cal take­away: when you eval­u­ate any investor, find out which of these four they are, look at their web­site and their port­fo­lio, and ask what return pro­file they’re built around. Their finan­cial DNA deter­mines how they’ll want you to run your com­pa­ny — and whether their ver­sion of suc­cess match­es yours.

When NOT to Raise a Series A: The Alternatives

If you take one thing from this guide, take this: rais­ing Series A fund­ing is a choice, not a mile­stone you’re oblig­at­ed to hit. The most com­mon — and often the best — way to build a SaaS com­pa­ny is through oper­at­ing cash flow: make mon­ey from cus­tomers, treat them well, and rein­vest the prof­it. It isn’t glam­orous. It’s also been work­ing for 2,000 years.

There’s a struc­tur­al advan­tage in SaaS eco­nom­ics that most founders under­use. If you bill annu­al­ly and col­lect upfront, you can be cash-flow pos­i­tive even while break­ing even on an accru­al basis — your bank bal­ance grows because cus­tomers pay a year ahead. That self-funds growth with­out sell­ing a sin­gle share. Com­pa­nies that boot­strap this way pro­tect a cash cush­ion (typ­i­cal­ly three to six months of reserves) and nev­er drop below it. Fund­ed com­pa­nies, hand­ed a large check, tend to spend fast — which is exact­ly why so many burn their run­way and end up rais­ing the next round under pres­sure.

And if you do need out­side mon­ey to fund growth but the busi­ness is fun­da­men­tal­ly healthy, equi­ty isn’t your only option. Debt can fund growth with­out sell­ing own­er­ship at all:

  • Ven­ture debt is a loan avail­able to ven­ture-backed com­pa­nies, usu­al­ly sized against the equi­ty you’ve raised, that extends your run­way with­out addi­tion­al dilu­tion.
  • SaaS debt financ­ing — includ­ing rev­enue-based and recur­ring-rev­enue lend­ing — advances cash against your con­tract­ed recur­ring rev­enue, which fits the SaaS tim­ing prob­lem where you pay to acquire a cus­tomer now but earn the cash back over the life of the con­tract.

Bank options exist too, but they’re stage-depen­dent: a boot­strapped com­pa­ny gen­er­al­ly needs to be cash-flow pos­i­tive and clos­er to $10M ARR than $5M before a bank gets com­fort­able, while non-bank lenders typ­i­cal­ly start engag­ing around $5M ARR and size the facil­i­ty as a mul­ti­ple of rev­enue.

The prin­ci­ple under­neath all of this: cap­i­tal should accel­er­ate a busi­ness that already works — it should nev­er start one that does­n’t. Once your cus­tomers are hap­py, you know how to sell to them, you know how to onboard them, and they stay for a long time, then out­side cap­i­tal can pour fuel on a proven fire. Series A fund­ing is, at its best, exact­ly that fuel. Before prod­uct-mar­ket fit, it usu­al­ly just helps you make mis­takes faster.

Avoiding the Forced Round (and the Down Round)

The sin­gle worst out­come in fundrais­ing is the down round — rais­ing mon­ey at a low­er val­u­a­tion than your pre­vi­ous round. Down rounds trig­ger anti-dilu­tion pro­vi­sions that crush founders and fre­quent­ly wipe out employ­ee stock options. I know some­one who held options in a seem­ing­ly suc­cess­ful com­pa­ny doing $80M a year in rev­enue for 20 years; the options end­ed up worth noth­ing because of down rounds in the mid­dle that wiped out the found­ing team and the employ­ees.

Here’s the key insight: you avoid the down round by avoid­ing the forced round. And you get forced into a round exact­ly one way — you run out of mon­ey. When you run out of mon­ey, your options col­lapse and you raise on what­ev­er terms you can get, which are almost always ter­ri­ble. This is just as true after a Series A as before one. A large Series A cre­ates the illu­sion of safe­ty; founders relax, spend against the full run­way, and find them­selves rais­ing a Series B from weak­ness 18 months lat­er.

So the defen­sive play­book is the same at every stage:

  1. Know whether you’re cash-flow pos­i­tive. When more cash enters the bank account each month than leaves it, it’s near­ly impos­si­ble to go out of busi­ness. That’s your strongest nego­ti­at­ing posi­tion, full stop.
  2. Raise with run­way to spare. Build the six-month cush­ion into the round (see the worked exam­ple above) so you can always walk away from a bad term sheet.
  3. Raise from strength, not need. The best time to raise a Series A is when you have proven trac­tion, mon­ey in the bank, and mul­ti­ple options. The worst time is when the bal­ance is shrink­ing and you have no choice.

Lever­age in any fundraise comes from not need­ing the mon­ey. Every­thing good in Series A fund­ing — a fair val­u­a­tion, clean terms, an investor who’s a gen­uine part­ner — flows from that one fact. Lose it, and the round stops being fuel and becomes a trap.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Series A funding in simple terms?

It’s the first large, priced round of insti­tu­tion­al ven­ture cap­i­tal a start­up rais­es, usu­al­ly after a small­er seed round and once the com­pa­ny has real rev­enue and clear evi­dence the prod­uct works. The mon­ey funds scal­ing a go-to-mar­ket motion that’s already been proven, in exchange for a mean­ing­ful slice of own­er­ship at an agreed val­u­a­tion.

How much revenue do you need for a Series A?

For B2B SaaS, the rough bar is $1M to $3M in ARR, grow­ing fast, with strong reten­tion — but the num­ber mat­ters less than what it sig­nals. Investors are under­writ­ing repeata­bil­i­ty: a go-to-mar­ket motion that works with­out the founder clos­ing every deal, unit eco­nom­ics that sup­port scal­ing, and net rev­enue reten­tion near or above 100%. A small­er, faster-grow­ing com­pa­ny with great met­rics can clear the bar before a larg­er, flat one.

How much should you raise in a Series A?

Size it bot­tom-up, not by what looks impres­sive. Cal­cu­late your true net month­ly burn (gross costs minus the gross prof­it from exist­ing rev­enue), mul­ti­ply by the months need­ed to reach the mile­stone that jus­ti­fies a Series B, then add about six months of cush­ion so you nev­er raise from weak­ness. For many SaaS com­pa­nies that lands in the high sin­gle-dig­it mil­lions.

How much equity do you give up in a Series A?

Own­er­ship sold equals the amount raised divid­ed by the post-mon­ey val­u­a­tion — a $9M round at a $36M post-mon­ey val­u­a­tion is 25% of the com­pa­ny. The real trap is that dilu­tion com­pounds across rounds: rais­ing through a Series B can eas­i­ly push founders below 50% own­er­ship, and down-round pro­vi­sions can take even more when things go wrong.

Is Series A funding right for a bootstrapped SaaS company?

Often not. Ven­ture cap­i­tal is built for “go big or go home” out­comes, which rarely match a founder aim­ing at a $25M–$100M exit while keep­ing con­trol. If the busi­ness is fun­da­men­tal­ly healthy, growth equi­ty, ven­ture debt, recur­ring-rev­enue financ­ing, or sim­ply grow­ing on oper­at­ing cash flow are usu­al­ly bet­ter-aligned paths. Raise a Series A only when the cap­i­tal accel­er­ates some­thing that already works.

What’s the difference between seed and Series A funding?

A seed round buys you the run­way to find prod­uct-mar­ket fit and is often raised on instru­ments (like SAFEs or con­vert­ible notes) that delay set­ting a val­u­a­tion. A Series A is a larg­er, priced round that comes after you’ve found fit, sets a firm val­u­a­tion, and funds scal­ing a proven motion. Investors fund a sto­ry at seed and fund evi­dence at Series A.


The mechan­ics of Series A fund­ing — term sheets, val­u­a­tions, lead investors — are easy to find any­where. What’s hard, and what actu­al­ly deter­mines whether you keep your com­pa­ny or lose it, is the judg­ment about whether and when to raise. Clear the bar with real met­rics, not a deck. Raise the amount the math demands and not a dol­lar more for ego. Nev­er let your­self get forced into a round. Do that, and Series A fund­ing works for you. Get it wrong, and you’ll spend years build­ing val­ue that ends up in some­one else’s pock­et.

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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