Find venture capital funds writing checks over $10M in the FinTech sector. Real check size data from SEC Form D filings. Match your raise amount to the right...
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A fund's typical check size is one of the strongest signals of what stage it targets. Micro-VCs writing checks under $500K are overwhelmingly pre-seed and early seed investors. Funds writing $2M–$10M checks are usually Series A leads or large seed participants. Funds writing $10M+ are growth-stage or crossover investors.
The data on this page is derived from SEC Form D filings, which disclose the total offering amount for each fund. We use this alongside portfolio size estimates to approximate per-company check size.
For a $1.5M pre-seed round, target investors whose check sizes range from $200K–$750K per deal. You need 3–5 investors to complete the round without any single investor having excessive concentration.
For a $10M Series A, you want lead investors capable of writing $4M–$6M checks and a handful of followers writing $500K–$1.5M checks. Targeting a $250K check fund for a $10M round lead is a misalignment of expectations.
VCs follow a rough rule of thumb: no single investment should exceed 5–10% of the total fund. A $20M fund therefore tops out at $1M–$2M per company. If you see a $20M fund listed in the "$10M+" range, they may be raising a larger successor fund or that figure refers to the total fund, not the per-deal check.
Larger funds ($100M+) writing $2M–$5M checks can be great Series A participants even if the deal is below their usual size — particularly in hot sectors like AI, climate tech, or biotech where conviction overrides check-size rules. Always check recent portfolio activity to confirm current deployment behavior.
Funds in the $10M+ range are typically FinTech funds targeting a specific stage of company maturity. Check size is one of the most reliable signals of where a VC plays in the funnel — smaller checks indicate pre-seed or seed focus while larger checks indicate Series A and beyond.
The best signal is a fund's SEC Form D filings, which disclose total offering amounts. Cross-reference this with the number of portfolio companies to estimate per-company check size. Aim for investors whose typical check is 20–50% of your round so you have room for co-investors.
Ideally, target funds whose check size naturally fits your raise without being their largest investment. A fund writing $500K checks leading a $2M round is a good fit. Approaching a $50M check fund for a $500K raise is usually a mismatch — they may pass or offer uncomfortably structured terms.
Yes. As funds raise larger successor funds, their average check sizes typically increase. A fund that led $500K rounds in 2019 may now write $2M–$5M checks with fresh capital. Always verify recent filing dates to understand current deployment strategy.
Total offering amount is the full fundraise goal for the fund. Minimum investment is the smallest LP check the fund accepts. Neither directly equals the per-startup investment check, but total offering divided by expected portfolio size is a useful approximation.