Startup Funding Stages: Where Are You?
Startup funding has distinct stages, each with different investors, expectations, and round sizes. Most articles explain them equally. That's a mistake - if you're reading this, you're probably at pre-seed or seed, and that's where 80% of the actionable detail should be.
Here's each stage explained by an investor who operates at the earliest ones.
The Funding Ladder
| Stage | Typical Round Size | Investors | What They Expect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Friends & Family | $10K - $100K | People who trust you | Belief in you as a person |
| Pre-seed | $100K - $2.5M | Angels, micro-VCs | Team + idea + early signal |
| Seed | $1M - $5M | Seed VCs, angels | Product + traction + growth |
| Series A | $5M - $20M | VC funds | $1-3.5M ARR, 100%+ growth |
| Series B+ | $15M - $100M+ | Growth VCs, PE | Market leadership, path to profit |
The critical thing to understand: Each stage funds you to reach the NEXT stage. Pre-seed money gets you to seed metrics. Seed money gets you to Series A metrics. If you don't hit the next stage's bar, you get stuck.
Friends & Family
What it is: Money from people in your personal life - parents, siblings, friends, former colleagues. This is the most informal stage.
Round size: $10K - $100K Instrument: Often informal notes, sometimes SAFEs Timeline: Days to weeks
When to use it: When you need enough money to build a prototype or get initial traction before pitching professional investors.
The risk: Mixing personal relationships with business money. Be transparent about the risks. Most startups fail - make sure the people you take money from can afford to lose it.
Pre-Seed (This Is Where I Invest Most)
What it is: The first professional investment into your company. Investors at this stage are betting on the founder and the market opportunity, with limited evidence that it will work.
Round size: $100K - $2.5M (median around $500K) Investors: Angel investors, micro-VCs, accelerators Instrument: SAFEs (~90% of deals) Valuation: $2M - $5M pre-money Timeline to close: 6-10 weeks
What investors expect:
- Strong founder-market fit
- A working prototype or MVP
- Early signals of demand (waitlist, LOIs, pilot customers)
- A compelling "Why Now" argument
- A clear plan for how the money gets you to seed
What investors do NOT expect:
- Revenue (helpful but not required)
- Product-market fit (that's what you're raising to find)
- A detailed 5-year financial model
- A complete team
This is where my advisory calls are most valuable - helping founders assess whether they're truly ready for pre-seed and what gaps to close first. Learn more about Angel Calls.
Seed
What it is: Your first significant institutional round. Usually led by a seed-stage VC fund, often with angels participating alongside.
Round size: $1M - $5M (SaaS median: $2.5M-$3.8M) Investors: Seed VCs, super angels, syndicates Instrument: SAFE or priced round Valuation: $5M - $15M pre-money Timeline to close: 2-4 months
What investors expect:
- Working product with real users
- $5K-$50K MRR or equivalent traction metrics
- Month-over-month growth of 15-30%
- Clear unit economics (or at least a path to them)
- A repeatable customer acquisition channel
- A plan to reach Series A metrics
The seed-to-Series A gap is real. Only 45% of seed-stage companies successfully raise Series A. The gap now stretches to 2.1 years on average. Plan your seed runway accordingly - target 24-30 months.
Series A
What it is: Your first large institutional round, typically led by a dedicated Series A fund. This is where governance gets formal - board seats, preferred stock, structured rights.
Round size: $5M - $20M (median ~$10M) Investors: VC funds (Sequoia, a16z, Accel, Bessemer, etc.) Instrument: Priced round (preferred stock) Valuation: $20M - $80M+ pre-money Timeline to close: 3-6 months
What investors expect:
- $1M - $3.5M ARR with 100-200%+ YoY growth
- Net revenue retention above 110% for B2B SaaS
- Gross margins above 65%
- Clear product-market fit
- A repeatable, scalable go-to-market engine
- Evidence of a large, addressable market
Series B and Beyond
Each subsequent stage requires exponentially more evidence. By Series B, investors expect:
- $5-10M+ ARR
- Category leadership or a clear path to it
- Unit economics that work at scale
- A management team beyond just the founders
These stages are beyond where most angel investors operate. The key point for early-stage founders: every decision you make today affects your ability to reach these stages later.
Planning your go-to-market for the next fundraising milestone? I help early-stage founders build GTM strategies - channels, ICP, messaging, positioning, and a 90-day roadmap. Written strategy delivered in 48 hours. Get a GTM Strategy - $900
How to Know What Stage You're At
Ask yourself these questions:
If you answer YES to most of these, you're at pre-seed:
- You have an idea and a prototype (or can build one quickly)
- You have early signals but no consistent revenue
- You need $100K-$500K to get to the next milestone
- You're raising from angels and micro-VCs
If you answer YES to most of these, you're at seed:
- You have a working product with real users
- You have some revenue or very strong engagement metrics
- You need $1-3M to scale
- You're talking to institutional seed funds
If you answer YES to most of these, you're at Series A:
- You have $1M+ ARR with strong growth
- You've found product-market fit
- You need $5-15M to scale the team and go-to-market
- You're talking to dedicated Series A funds
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the main stages of startup funding?
The main stages are: Friends & Family ($10K-$100K), Pre-Seed ($100K-$2.5M), Seed ($1M-$5M), Series A ($5M-$20M), and Series B+ ($15M-$100M+). Each stage has different investors, expectations, and timelines. Most startups begin with pre-seed funding from angel investors.
How long does each funding stage last?
Pre-seed to seed typically takes 12-18 months. Seed to Series A now averages 2.1 years. Series A to Series B is usually 18-24 months. Each stage should fund enough runway to reach the next stage's metrics bar.
What is the difference between pre-seed and seed?
Pre-seed investors bet on the team and market with limited traction evidence. Seed investors expect a working product, real users, and early revenue ($5K-$50K MRR). Pre-seed rounds are smaller ($100K-$2.5M vs $1M-$5M) and use SAFEs. Seed rounds may be priced with more formal terms.
Can I skip funding stages?
Technically yes, but it's rare. A few exceptional companies go straight from idea to Series A, but this typically requires a rockstar team with prior exits. For most founders, each stage builds the credibility and traction needed for the next.
Artem Luko is an angel investor based in Marbella, investing $25K-$3M in pre-seed and seed startups. Learn more at artemluko.com.
