
A founder can own half of a company, sell it for $50M, and walk away with $20M while the investor who owns the other half walks away with $30M. Same ownership, wildly different paydays. The mechanism that does this is a single clause in the term sheet called the liquidation preference — the right of an investor to be paid back first, off the top, before you see a dollar. Most founders obsess over the headline valuation and barely read this clause. That is exactly backwards. The valuation is what one of my colleagues calls the ego metric; the liquidation preference is where the money actually moves.
This is not a legal-theory piece. It is a practical walkthrough of how a liquidation preference reorders your exit, with the payout math worked out in numbers in your range, so you can model what each term does to your own wire transfer before you sign. If you run a B2B SaaS company between $5M and $15M in annual recurring revenue (ARR) and you have taken — or are about to take — institutional money, the liquidation preference is the term most likely to quietly cost you eight figures. The good news: once you can do the math, it stops being a trap and becomes a thing you negotiate.
A note before we start. Everything here is educational, not legal or tax advice. Term-sheet provisions touch securities law and vary by entity type, state, and the exact wording of your agreements. The dollar figures below are illustrative — chosen to show how the mechanics work, not to quote current market terms. Before you act on anything here, confirm the specifics with your own securities attorney. And read the actual payout model — the waterfall — your banker builds for any real offer.
What a Liquidation Preference Actually Is
Start with the word almost no one defines for founders: liquidation. In this context it does not mean bankruptcy. A “liquidation event” is any event that turns the company into cash for its owners — most often a sale or merger, sometimes a wind-down. When that event happens, the cash gets distributed to shareholders. The only question that matters is: in what order, and how much to each.
A liquidation preference is a contractual right that puts certain shareholders at the front of that line. Specifically, it is the right of preferred stockholders — the senior class of shares that professional investors buy — to get paid back before common stockholders (you, your co-founders, and your employees with options) receive anything. Preferred stock is “preferred” precisely because it carries rights common stock does not, and the liquidation preference is the most financially important of those rights.
Here is the analogy that makes it click. Think of how a home sale works when you still have a mortgage. The house sells for $500,000, but you do not pocket $500,000. The bank that holds your mortgage gets paid first — say $300,000 — and only the remaining $200,000 flows to you, the owner. The bank’s mortgage is senior to your ownership. A liquidation preference does the same thing inside your cap table: the investor’s preference is the “mortgage” that gets paid off the top, and you, the common shareholder, are the homeowner who only sees what is left.
This is why your fully diluted ownership percentage — the figure you track on your cap table — is only half the story of your payout. Ownership tells you how the pie gets split after the preferences are paid. The preferences decide how much pie is left to split in the first place. Miss that distinction and you will misjudge what your equity is worth by millions.
Why Founders Ignore the One Term That Matters
Founders fixate on the pre-money valuation — the value placed on the company before the new investment goes in — because it is the bragging-rights number. “We raised at a $100M valuation” is a sentence you can say at a conference. It feels like the scoreboard. And professional investors know this, so they happily let you win the number you care about in exchange for the terms they care about.
I learned this most vividly from a family member who runs a multi-billion-dollar growth-equity fund. His standing offer to valuation-obsessed founders is blunt: I will give you almost any valuation you want, provided I get to write the other three or four terms first. He can hand a founder a headline number that sounds spectacular and still structure the deal so that he captures most of the economics — because the liquidation preference, the participation right, and the anti-dilution clause do the real work while the founder is admiring the valuation.
He once described the extreme version to make the point: he could agree to a $9B valuation if it came paired with a 9x liquidation preference — meaning the fund gets back nine times its money before anyone else sees a cent. At that point the headline is pure theater. The company would have to sell for an enormous figure before a single dollar reached the founder. The founder gets the bragging rights of a $9B valuation; the investor gets a structure where it is nearly impossible for the founder to make money.
The lesson is not that investors are villains — a reasonable liquidation preference is standard and fair, and we will get to what reasonable looks like. The lesson is that the headline valuation and the liquidation preference are two separate negotiations, and the second one matters more to your bank account than the first. As the colleague who taught me term-sheet math likes to say: if you do not do the math in business, you pay the stupid tax. The liquidation preference is the most expensive line item founders routinely skip.
How the Preference Works: The 1x Case
The most common liquidation preference is a 1x preference (read “one times”). It means the investor gets back 100% of the money they invested — one times their capital — before the remaining proceeds are distributed. This is the standard, founder-reasonable structure, so it is the right place to anchor.
Let me work the example I use in coaching. An investor puts in $10M to buy 50% of your company, structured as preferred stock with a 1x non-participating preference (we will define “non-participating” in a moment — for now, treat it as the plain 1x case). A couple of years later, the company sells for $50M. Not every company triples; a $50M outcome on a company that raised at this level is a real, sober result, not a fantasy.
Your instinct says: we each own half, so we each get $25M. That instinct is wrong, and here is why.
With the 1x preference, the investor first takes their $10M back off the top. That leaves $40M ($50M − $10M). To keep this first walk-through concrete, assume the investor also shares in that remainder by ownership — the participating structure we will define precisely in two sections. So the $40M is split 50/50, and each side gets $20M of it. Now add it up:
- Investor: $10M preference + $20M share of the remainder = $30M
- You: $20M share of the remainder = $20M
You own half the company, but you receive 40% of the payout ($20M of $50M). The investor owns half but receives 60%. That 10-point swing — $5M moving from your side of the table to theirs — comes entirely from one clause. Nothing about the valuation caused it. The preference did. (As we will see, a non-participating preference would actually treat you better at this exit — the investor would have to choose between the preference and converting, not take both. Hold that thought.)
Notice the deeper principle, and let me state it plainly: who gets cash first in a liquidation event makes a very, very big difference to the final payday. Payout order is the master variable. Everything else in this article is just elaboration on that one idea.
When the Multiple Climbs: 2x and 3x Preferences
Most preferences are 1x. But you will occasionally see a 2x or even 3x preference, where the investor gets back two or three times their capital before common shareholders are paid. A higher multiple is more common in down markets, in later or rescue rounds, or when an investor is pricing in extra risk — and it is brutal for founders.
Take the same deal — investor in for $10M owning 50%, company sells for $50M — but make it a 2x preference (keeping the participating mechanic from the last section, where the investor takes the preference and shares the remainder). Now the investor takes $20M off the top ($10M × 2) before anything is split. That leaves $30M ($50M − $20M) to split 50/50, so each side gets $15M of the remainder. Tally it:
- Investor: $20M preference + $15M share of the remainder = $35M
- You: $15M share of the remainder = $15M
You still own half. You now take home 30% of the payout. Moving the preference from 1x to 2x took $5M more out of your pocket on the exact same exit — and on a larger check or a bigger exit, that same one-digit edit swings far more. That is the part that should make you read every term sheet word by word: changing a “1x” to a “2x” is one character in a 200-page purchase agreement. As the colleague who taught me this math likes to say, one number out of 200 pages can make a difference worth tens of millions to you. The provisions that decide your fortune are not in bold headline type; they are buried in the fine print, often phrased to look innocuous.
It gets worse at higher multiples. A 3x preference on that $10M investment is $30M off the top. With a $50M exit, that leaves $20M to split — you would get $10M, they would get $30M + $10M = $40M. And if the company sold for $30M instead, a 3x preference ($30M) would consume the entire proceeds. The investor takes everything; you and your employees get nothing, despite owning half the equity. The multiple is a quiet lever that can zero you out before the split even begins.
Here is the same $50M exit across the three multiples, with the investor in for $10M owning half — all participating, so the investor takes the multiple off the top and then also shares the remainder:
| Participating preference on $10M | Investor takes off the top | Remainder split 50/50 | Investor total | Your total | Your share of payout |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1x participating | $10M | $40M | $30M | $20M | 40% |
| 2x participating | $20M | $30M | $35M | $15M | 30% |
| 3x participating | $30M | $20M | $40M | $10M | 20% |
Read down the “Your total” column. The valuation never changed. The exit price never changed. Your ownership never changed. The only thing that changed is a single multiple — and your payday fell from $20M to $10M. (We have held participation constant here to isolate the multiple. The next section flips the other switch — participating versus non-participating — and shows how much that alone is worth.)
Participating vs. Non-Participating: The Double-Dip
So far every worked example has assumed the investor takes the preference and then also shares the remainder — the participating structure. That was a deliberate choice to show the harsher mechanic first. Now we make the distinction explicit, because whether a preference participates swings nearly as much money as the multiple does.
A participating preference lets the investor do both. They take their multiple back off the top and then also share, pro rata by ownership, in whatever is left. The word I use for this is double dipping — the investor dips once for the preference, then dips again for their ownership slice of the remainder. It is the harsher structure, and it is the one investors push for. Every “off the top, then split” example above was participating.
A non-participating preference forces the investor to choose. At exit, they can either (a) take their liquidation preference, or (b) ignore the preference, convert their preferred stock into common stock, and take their straight ownership share — whichever is larger. They do not get both. They pick the bigger of the two outcomes, and that is all they receive. This is why, in a great exit, a non-participating investor simply converts to common and rides the upside alongside you; the preference only matters on the downside, as a floor that protects their capital. Non-participating is the founder-friendlier structure, and a 1x non-participating preference is the market-standard default.
Watch how much that single switch is worth on our standard deal — investor in for $10M, owning 50%, $50M exit:
- 1x participating: $10M off the top, then 50% of the remaining $40M ($20M) → investor $30M, you $20M.
- 1x non-participating: the investor compares their preference ($10M) against converting to common (50% of $50M = $25M), takes the larger — so they convert and take $25M, leaving you $25M.
Same money in, same ownership, same exit. Flipping participation off moved $5M back to your side of the table ($20M → $25M). At a $50M exit the 1x non-participating investor does not even use the preference — converting beats it — which is exactly why non-participating is the term to fight for. And participation only gets more punishing as the investor’s ownership share shrinks and the exit climbs, because that “second dip” is then taken on a much larger remainder. That is the scenario that exposes it, and it is the one I walk founders through next.
The Participating-Preferred Worked Example That Exposes It
Here is the example that makes participation impossible to ignore. It is the one I walk founders through when they tell me they secured a “great valuation.”
An investor puts in $20M for 20% of the company — a high valuation, since $20M for 20% implies a $100M post-money valuation. The founder is thrilled with the headline. But the investor negotiated a 2x participating preference. The company later sells for $100M. Here is what actually happens:
- Step 1 — the dip off the top: the 2x preference returns twice the $20M invested, so the investor takes $40M before anything is split.
- Step 2 — the second dip: $60M remains ($100M − $40M); the participating investor takes their 20% of that remainder, which is $12M.
- Investor total: $40M + $12M = $52M.
- Everyone else (you and the rest of the common holders, owning 80%): the remaining 80% of the $60M = $48M.
Sit with that. The investor owns 20% of the company and walks away with $52M of a $100M exit — more than half. The 80% owners split $48M. This is why an investor can hand you a spectacular valuation and still make more money than you do. The valuation flattered your ego; the 2x participating preference captured the economics. The two were never the same conversation.
To see the spread clearly, here is that $20M-in / 20%-owned / $100M-exit deal under four different terms:
| Term on the $20M investment | Investor takes | Common holders (80%) take | Investor share of payout |
|---|---|---|---|
| Common stock, no preference | $20M | $80M | 20% |
| 1x non-participating | $20M | $80M | 20% |
| 2x non-participating | $40M | $60M | 40% |
| 2x participating | $52M | $48M | 52% |
The “common stock” and “1x non-participating” rows are identical here — because in a strong exit, a 1x non-participating investor just converts to common and takes their 20%. That is the point of non-participating: on the upside it disappears. The 2x participating row is the outlier that quietly redirects $32M relative to a clean deal.
The lesson is not “never grant a preference.” Virtually every professional investor will require one, and a 1x non-participating preference is the market-standard, founder-reasonable default — anchor your negotiation there. The lesson is that you must model what each specific term does to your wire transfer before you sign, the way the mechanics of participating preferred stock deserve their own study before you sit across the table.
Seniority and Stacking: When Preferences Line Up Behind Each Other
Everything so far assumed a single investor with a single preference. Real companies raise multiple rounds, and each round usually comes with its own preference. Now the order among the investors matters, not just the order between investors and you. This is seniority, and how the preferences line up is called the stack.
There are two common ways to order a multi-round stack:
- Standard (stacked) seniority — the most recent investors get paid first, then the round before them, and so on back to the earliest. The Series C preference is paid off the top, then the Series B, then the Series A, and only then does anything reach common. Later investors insist on this because they took the most recent risk and want to be first in line.
- Pari passu — a Latin term meaning “on equal footing.” Here all the preferred rounds sit at the same level of seniority and get paid simultaneously. If there is not enough money to satisfy every preference in full, they share the available cash pro rata, each taking the same cents-on-the-dollar.
The analogy, again from lending: a stacked structure is like a first mortgage and a second mortgage on a house — the first-mortgage lender is paid in full before the second-mortgage lender sees anything. Pari passu is like two lenders agreeing to split whatever the sale yields proportionally, neither jumping ahead of the other.
Why this matters to you, the common holder: you sit at the very bottom of the stack regardless. Every preference, in every round, at every multiple, gets satisfied before common stock is paid. So the more rounds you raise and the higher the multiples you agree to, the taller the wall of preferences standing between the exit price and your payout. This is the cumulative version of the “off the top” principle — and it compounds quietly across rounds while you are focused on the next valuation headline.
A concrete stack: suppose you raised a $5M Series A and a $15M Series B, both with 1x non-participating preferences, standard seniority. The total preference overhang is $20M ($15M + $5M) — that much has to be paid before common sees a dollar, with the Series B’s $15M paid first. If the company sells for $18M, the Series B takes its full $15M, the Series A takes only the remaining $3M of its $5M preference, and common gets nothing. Same company, sold for $60M, and the picture is completely different — the $20M of preferences come off the top, $40M remains to split, and your ownership slice finally pays. The exit price relative to the preference stack is what determines whether common participates at all.
The Waterfall: The Spreadsheet That Decides Everything
When you get a real offer, your banker or attorney will build a model that runs the exit proceeds through every preference, every multiple, every participation right, and every seniority rule, in order, and shows what each shareholder nets at various exit prices. That model is called the waterfall — because the money “falls” from one tier to the next, filling each preference in order of seniority before any overflow reaches the level below.
Demystified, the waterfall is just a spreadsheet. The way I describe it: it is the spreadsheet that shows you — if the business is worth $30M versus $300M — who gets what, in what order, once you add in all the formulas from all the different contracts. There is nothing mystical about it. But almost no founder asks to see it, and the ones who do not are the ones who get surprised.
I will tell you the story that should make you demand the waterfall on every deal. A well-known SaaS company from two decades ago raised roughly $100M from one fund, then roughly $100M more from another. It scaled to about $100M in ARR — a genuinely successful product, with happy customers. Then the market turned and it sold in a fire sale. The founders, after 25 years of work, received zero. They got waterfalled out: the preferences from $200M of invested capital sat ahead of them in the stack, the sale price did not clear that wall, and common stock — the founders’ stock — fell below the waterline. The product was great. The customers were happy. The founders still walked away with nothing, because they did not know their math and were overly ambitious with how much they raised and at what terms.
That outcome is the whole reason this article exists. A liquidation preference is not an abstraction. It is the difference between a life-changing exit and 25 years for nothing, and it is decided years before the sale, one term sheet at a time. If you want the broader frame for timing and structuring a sale, this math sits underneath any serious SaaS exit strategy.
The Conversion Threshold: When the Preference Stops Mattering
Here is the more hopeful half of the picture, and the reason a 1x non-participating preference is genuinely fine. For a non-participating investor, there is an exit price above which they stop taking the preference entirely and simply convert to common — because their ownership share is now worth more than their fixed preference. That price is the conversion threshold, and above it, the preference effectively vanishes.
The logic is the max() rule from the last section: a non-participating investor receives the larger of (a) their preference or (b) their ownership share as converted common. The preference is a fixed dollar amount; the common value rises with the exit price. At some exit price, the rising common value overtakes the fixed preference — and from there up, the investor converts and the preference no longer costs you anything.
Work it for our standard deal — investor in for $10M, owning 50%, 1x non-participating. Their preference is a fixed $10M. Their converted-common value is 50% of the exit. Set the two equal to find the crossover: 50% × exit = $10M, which gives an exit of $20M. Below a $20M exit, 50% of the proceeds is less than $10M, so the investor takes the $10M preference and you get whatever is left. Above $20M, converting wins — at our $50M exit, the investor converts for 50% × $50M = $25M, and you take the other $25M. The preference has gone dormant; you are back to a clean 50/50 split.
That is the founder-friendly property of a non-participating preference in one sentence: above the conversion threshold, the preference disappears and you split pro rata. It is a downside floor for the investor, not an upside tax on you. A participating preference has no such threshold — the investor takes the multiple off the top and shares the remainder at every exit price, forever. That single structural difference — a preference that fades at scale versus one that double-dips permanently — is worth tens of millions on a large exit, and it is invisible until someone builds the model and you read it.
Down Rounds: Where the Preference Turns Predatory
One more scenario, because it is where, in my experience, you see 90% of the predatory behavior: the down round — raising new money at a lower valuation than your previous round.
Two things happen in a down round, and they stack. First, the lower valuation dilutes you more than an up round would. Second, your earlier investors usually hold anti-dilution protection — a clause that issues them additional shares to compensate for the lower price, and those shares come out of your ownership. The harsher form is “full ratchet”; the more common, founder-friendlier form is “weighted average.” Either way, a founder who owned 40% before a bad down round can find themselves owning something closer to 5% after the anti-dilution adjustment runs. The preference stack does not shrink in a down round — but your slice of whatever is left after the preferences can collapse.
The contrarian takeaway most founders miss: pushing your valuation too high is itself a risk. An aggressive valuation you cannot grow into raises the odds of a future down round, which is precisely where the anti-dilution clauses and the high-multiple preferences do their damage. There is even a perverse incentive layered on top — an investor who paid a sky-high price and has not earned their target return can vote against a sale that would net you millions, because the price does not clear their preference. You can end up unable to exit at all. The discipline that prevents this is the same one that separates a durable SaaS financial model from an optimistic one: raise the right amount at terms you can grow into, and stay close enough to cash-flow positive that you are never forced into a punitive round. If you want the deeper treatment, the anti-dilution and protective provisions that live alongside the preference in any term sheet deserve their own study before you ever face one.
Why Investors Structure It This Way — and What You Can Do
Step back from the mechanics and the asymmetry becomes obvious. Founders optimize for upside; professional investors engineer downside protection. A founder dreams about the home run. An investor — managing a portfolio where most bets disappoint — structures every deal so they can barely lose, ideally with unlimited upside and very little downside. The liquidation preference is the single most powerful tool for that. It guarantees the investor’s capital comes back first, which means even a mediocre exit returns their money, while a great exit (via conversion) still lets them ride the equity. Heads they win, tails they do not lose.
That is not a reason to refuse preferences — it is a reason to negotiate them with your eyes open. Here is what you can actually do:
- Anchor on 1x non-participating. This is the market-standard, founder-reasonable structure. Treat anything beyond it — a higher multiple, or participation — as a concession you are paying for, and price it. If an investor demands a 2x participating preference, that is not a detail; it is them taking a second, larger slice of your exit, and it should cost them on price or elsewhere.
- Model the waterfall before you sign — at several exit prices. Do not accept a term sheet on the strength of its valuation. Have your banker or attorney run the payout at a disappointing exit, a base-case exit, and a strong exit. The term that looks harmless at the strong exit may zero you out at the disappointing one.
- Watch the multiple and the participation flag — they swing the most money. Of all the variables, the preference multiple (1x vs 2x vs 3x) and whether it participates move your payout the most. A single character in the agreement controls each. Read them personally; do not delegate the most expensive sentence in the document.
- Mind the cumulative stack across rounds. Every round adds a preference ahead of you. The more you raise and the higher the multiples, the taller the wall between the exit and your money. This is one more reason not to over-raise, and a reason to understand your full SaaS company valuation net of the entire preference stack, not just the headline.
- Get securities counsel in before you negotiate terms, not after. A banker gets you offers; a securities attorney makes sure the wording of the preference, the participation right, and the anti-dilution clause does not quietly cost you millions. This is their bread and butter — use them. The fee is trivial against an eight-figure mistake.
A reasonable preference is the price of professional capital, and professional capital, used well, is what builds a company worth a large exit in the first place — see how the tradeoff fits the broader venture capital vs. bootstrapping decision. The goal is not to avoid preferences. The goal is to never be the founder who is surprised by one.
How This Shapes What You Actually Net
Connect this back to why you are building. You are not optimizing for the highest valuation headline; you are optimizing for the largest number that actually reaches your bank account when you sell. The liquidation preference is the bridge — or the wall — between the enterprise value a buyer pays and the personal proceeds you receive. Three forces on it decide the gap:
- The multiple — 1x, 2x, or 3x — which sets how much capital is returned off the top before anything is split.
- Participation — whether the investor takes their preference and shares in the remainder (double dip), or has to choose the larger of the two (non-participating).
- The stack — how many rounds of preferences sit ahead of your common stock, and in what seniority order.
A founder who owns 50% of a company with a single 1x non-participating preference nets dramatically more on the same exit than a founder who owns 50% behind a stack of 2x participating preferences. Same ownership. Same exit price. Wildly different payday — and the difference is entirely in the structure. That structure is built one term sheet at a time, years before the sale closes. Every financing decision you make today becomes a future line in the waterfall. Understanding the liquidation preference is how you make sure that line reads in your favor. Treat it with the same rigor you bring to your core SaaS unit economics — because at exit, it is the number that matters most.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a liquidation preference in simple terms?
A liquidation preference is the right of preferred shareholders — the investors — to be paid back before common shareholders (founders and employees) when the company is sold. A 1x preference returns 100% of the investor’s capital off the top; a 2x returns twice their money, and so on, before anyone else is paid. It works like a mortgage on the company: the investor’s money comes out of the sale price first, and you only see what remains.
What’s the difference between participating and non-participating preferred?
A non-participating preference forces the investor to choose: take their preference or convert to common and take their ownership share — whichever is larger, but not both. A participating preference lets them do both: take their money back off the top and then also share, by ownership, in what is left. Participating is the harsher, “double-dip” structure and shifts the most money away from founders, especially in larger exits. The founder-reasonable default is 1x non-participating.
How does a liquidation preference reduce what a founder gets?
It is paid before your common stock, so it comes out of the proceeds first and shrinks the pool that gets split by ownership. An investor who puts in $10M for 50% of a company with a 1x participating preference takes $10M off the top of a $50M exit and then also takes half of the remaining $40M — ending with $30M while you get $20M. You own half but receive 40% of the payout. A 1x non-participating preference would treat you better here ($25M each, because the investor converts), but a higher 2x or 3x multiple takes even more.
Is a 1x liquidation preference standard?
Yes. A 1x non-participating preference is the market-standard, founder-reasonable structure, and virtually every professional investor will require some preference. Treat 1x non-participating as your default anchor. Anything beyond it — a 2x or 3x multiple, or a participation right — is a meaningful concession that materially reduces your exit proceeds and should be negotiated as such, not waved through as boilerplate.
What is a payout waterfall and why should I see it?
A waterfall is the spreadsheet that runs your exit proceeds through every preference, multiple, participation right, and seniority rule, in order, and shows what each shareholder nets at various exit prices. It is the only way to know what you actually take home before you sign. Founders who skip it get surprised at closing; some have been “waterfalled out” entirely — receiving nothing despite building a successful product — because the preference stack exceeded the sale price. Always have your banker build it, model several exit prices, and read it.
For a plain-English walk-through of how liquidation preferences distribute proceeds, see AngelList’s primer on liquidation preferences, and for the underlying valuation mechanics, the Corporate Finance Institute’s liquidation preference resource. Confirm any specifics with your own securities attorney before acting.

