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Venture Debt for Startups: When and How to Use It

Venture debt has emerged as one of the most important complementary financing tools in the European startup ecosystem. Unlike equity funding, which requires founders to sell ownership in their company, venture debt provides capital as a loan — allowing startups to extend their runway, finance specific growth initiatives, or bridge to the next equity round without additional dilution. For venture-backed companies with predictable revenue or clear milestones ahead, venture debt can be a strategically powerful addition to the capital structure.

Yet venture debt remains poorly understood by many European founders, who often view it as either a sign of weakness (unable to raise equity) or an unnecessary complication. Neither perception is accurate. Used correctly, venture debt is a tool of financial sophistication — and the European venture debt market has matured significantly, with dedicated providers, standardised terms, and a growing track record of successful deployments.

What Is Venture Debt?

Venture debt is a form of debt financing specifically designed for venture-capital-backed startups. Unlike traditional bank loans, which require collateral, profitability, and years of financial history, venture debt is underwritten primarily on the strength of the company’s VC backers, its growth trajectory, and its ability to raise future equity rounds.

Venture debt typically takes the form of a term loan with a fixed interest rate, a repayment schedule of 24-48 months, and warrants — small equity stakes (typically 0.5-2% of the company) that give the lender upside participation if the company succeeds. The combination of interest payments and warrants makes venture debt more expensive than traditional bank debt but significantly cheaper than equity in terms of dilution.

A typical venture debt facility is sized at 25-50% of the most recent equity round. A company that has just raised a €10 million Series A might secure €3-5 million in venture debt alongside or shortly after the equity round. The debt extends the company’s runway by 6-12 months and provides capital for specific initiatives without requiring the founders to raise a larger (and more dilutive) equity round.

When to Use Venture Debt

Venture debt is most valuable in specific strategic situations. The most common use case is runway extension — adding 6-12 months of operating capital after an equity round to give the company more time to hit milestones before the next raise. This is particularly valuable when the company is close to a significant inflection point (reaching profitability, closing a major contract, or achieving a regulatory milestone) that would meaningfully increase its valuation.

Growth financing is another common application. If a company has proven unit economics and needs capital to scale a specific channel (hiring a sales team, expanding into a new market, investing in marketing), venture debt can fund that growth without the months-long distraction of an equity fundraise. This is particularly relevant for SaaS companies with strong net revenue retention, where each incremental customer is clearly accretive.

Bridge financing — using debt to bridge between equity rounds when the timing is not ideal — is a valid but riskier use case. If the company is genuinely close to its next fundraise and needs a few months of additional runway, a bridge loan can be appropriate. However, using venture debt to paper over fundamental problems (missed targets, declining growth) is dangerous — it adds a repayment obligation to a company that may already be struggling.

Key Terms and Structure

Understanding the standard terms of a venture debt facility is essential for evaluating whether a specific offer is competitive.

Interest rate. Venture debt typically carries interest rates of 8-14%, depending on the company’s stage, the lender, and market conditions. Rates may be fixed or floating (tied to a benchmark like EURIBOR or SOFR plus a spread). Some facilities include a payment-in-kind (PIK) component, where a portion of the interest accrues rather than being paid in cash — preserving cash flow but increasing the total cost.

Warrants. Lenders typically receive warrants to purchase shares equal to 0.5-2% of the company’s fully diluted equity. The warrant strike price is usually set at the price of the most recent equity round. Warrants add dilution, but significantly less than a comparable equity raise would.

Covenants. Venture debt agreements include financial covenants — conditions the company must maintain throughout the loan term. Common covenants include minimum cash balance requirements, revenue milestones, and restrictions on additional debt. Breaching a covenant can trigger an event of default, giving the lender the right to accelerate repayment.

Draw-down structure. Many venture debt facilities are structured as revolving lines of credit or tranched loans, where the company can draw capital as needed within a specified period (typically 6-12 months). This flexibility means the company only pays interest on capital it actually uses.

Venture Debt Providers in Europe

The European venture debt market has expanded significantly, with both dedicated venture lenders and traditional financial institutions now actively serving the startup ecosystem.

Dedicated venture debt funds include Kreos Capital (one of Europe’s oldest and largest, now part of BlackRock), Bootstrap Europe, Columbia Lake Partners, and Claret Capital Partners. These funds specialise exclusively in lending to VC-backed companies and understand the unique dynamics of startup growth.

Public institutions play a uniquely European role. The European Investment Bank (EIB) and its venture debt programme provide large-scale facilities (often €15-50 million) to growth-stage European startups at competitive rates. National development banks — Bpifrance, the British Business Bank, and KfW — also offer venture lending programmes, sometimes on highly favourable terms.

Commercial banks have increasingly entered the space. Silicon Valley Bank (now part of First Citizens) maintains a European presence, while HSBC Innovation Banking (formerly SVB UK) and Stifel serve the UK market. European banks like ABN AMRO and ING have also developed startup lending programmes.

Risks and Considerations

Venture debt is not free money — it carries real risks that founders must understand before signing a facility agreement. The most fundamental risk is the repayment obligation. Unlike equity, which never needs to be repaid, debt must be serviced. If the company’s growth stalls or a subsequent equity round fails to materialise, the debt payments can become a severe cash drain, potentially forcing the company into restructuring or insolvency.

Covenant risk is equally important. Breaching a financial covenant — even a technical breach caused by a temporary dip in revenue or cash — gives the lender significant power. While most venture lenders prefer to work constructively with borrowers, a covenant breach in a distressed situation can lead to accelerated repayment demands or forced asset sales.

The decision to take venture debt should always be discussed with your equity investors. Existing VCs will have views on whether debt is appropriate for the company’s situation, and their support (or opposition) can influence the terms available. The best venture debt outcomes occur when the equity investors, the founders, and the lender are aligned on the company’s trajectory and capital needs.

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