Resources and funding options specifically designed for entrepreneurs raising their first round
First-time founders face a credibility gap that experienced entrepreneurs do not. Without a track record of exits or prior venture-backed companies, the fundraising process demands extra preparation. The good news: the funding landscape has meaningfully improved over the last decade. Micro-VC funds, pre-seed programs, and founder-friendly accelerators now specifically target first-time founders who show strong market insight, early traction, or novel technical capabilities. In 2024, more than 60% of seed-stage deals went to teams where at least one founder had never raised institutional capital before. Investors increasingly bet on potential rather than past outcomes — provided you can articulate your thesis clearly and demonstrate that you understand your market deeply.
Small Business Administration / Federal Agencies
Non-dilutive federal R&D funding available to any small business. No prior experience required — strong technical merit is the primary criterion.
National Science Foundation
Customer discovery training combined with a $50K stipend. Ideal for first-time founders with a technical background validating a market.
Federal Government
Comprehensive database of all federal grant opportunities. Filter by eligibility to find programs explicitly open to first-time applicants.
Additional opportunities available in our full grants database.
The following venture capital funds from our SEC-verified database have investment profiles relevant to first-time founders.
All stages, all industries
All industries, 50+ global programs
Consumer, B2B, diverse teams
Pre-idea to pre-seed
Community + funding connections
Browse our full accelerator database for more programs.
Drew Houston
Drew had never founded a company before Dropbox. His Y Combinator application and demo video were compelling enough to secure backing despite zero prior track record.
Brian Chesky
Brian was a designer with no startup experience. Sequoia and Y Combinator backed the team based on their dogged customer obsession and creative problem-solving.
A step-by-step fundraising roadmap tailored for first-time founders.
Write a one-page explanation of why you specifically are positioned to solve this problem. Investors fund founders who see what others miss.
YC, Techstars, and 500 Startups review first-time founders regularly. A single acceptance opens doors to angels and seed funds that otherwise ignore cold outreach.
Get warm introductions to 5 angels before approaching VCs. Angel investors are far more accessible and more willing to back unproven founders.
File an SBIR application if your startup has any R&D component. $275K in non-dilutive capital dramatically strengthens your seed pitch.
First-time fund managers are statistically more likely to back first-time founders. Search for Funds I and II on SEC EDGAR and approach them directly.
Yes. The majority of seed-stage investments go to first-time founders. VCs evaluate team quality, market understanding, and early traction — not just prior exits. Accelerator programs are particularly first-time-founder-friendly.
At the pre-seed stage, expect to give 5-15% for $100K-$500K. At seed, 15-25% for $1M-$3M. First-time founders rarely get premium valuations, but strong traction and market size can compress dilution.
For most first-time founders, yes. Accelerators provide credibility, a network of co-investors, and structured preparation. YC in particular acts as a signal that dramatically improves seed fundraising outcomes.
Non-dilutive grants (SBIR, STTR, state innovation funds), revenue-based financing, angel syndicates, and crowdfunding platforms like Republic and Wefunder are all viable paths that do not require a prior exit history.
Expect 3-6 months for a seed round as a first-time founder — roughly double the time it takes experienced founders. Build runway accordingly and start the process earlier than you think necessary.