CeleBreak is a sports technology company that operates a digital platform to make football (soccer) accessible by connecting amateur players for pick-up games, tournaments, leagues, training sessions, and private field rentals.[1][2][3] Founded in 2015 and headquartered in Barcelona, Spain, it serves the amateur sports community across multiple cities including Barcelona, Los Angeles, Berlin, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Munich, and Dubai, with over $1.81M raised in unattributed funding and an estimated revenue of $6M.[1][2] The platform solves the challenge of finding games, fields, and players by enabling easy organization and participation, fostering community growth with 11-50 employees and operations in mobile app development.[1][2]
CeleBreak was founded in 2015 in Barcelona, Spain, at Carrer de Joaquim Ruyra, 9-11, with a focus on building football communities through technology.[1][2][3] While specific founders are not detailed in available sources, the company emerged to address the need for accessible football experiences for amateurs, expanding from Barcelona to international cities like Los Angeles, Berlin, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Munich, and Dubai.[2][3] Early traction came via its app, which organizes games and events, leading to steady growth including $1.81M in total funding through one unattributed round and partnerships for field rentals.[1][2] Pivotal moments include scaling to multiple countries and cities, with recent job postings for community builders and interns in Dubai and Madrid signaling expansion.[3]
CeleBreak rides the wave of sports tech democratization, leveraging mobile apps to tap into football's global popularity (the world's most-played sport) amid rising demand for casual, social fitness post-pandemic.[1][4] Timing aligns with urbanization and app-driven marketplaces (e.g., similar to Plei or Goalcup), where market forces like increased amateur participation and underutilized fields favor platforms that connect supply (fields/players) with demand.[1][2][5] It influences the ecosystem by partnering with facilities for revenue sharing and expanding to new markets like Dubai, contributing to community-building trends in sports tech while competing in a fragmented space of soccer organizers.[3][5]
CeleBreak's momentum—spanning 2015 founding, multi-city presence, and recent Dubai/Madrid hiring—positions it for scaled growth in amateur sports tech, potentially through more funding or acquisitions amid rising app adoption.[2][3] Trends like AI-enhanced matching, Web3 fan engagement, and global football tourism will shape its path, evolving its influence from local connector to international platform leader. As community sports digitize, CeleBreak exemplifies accessible football's tech-driven future, tying back to its core mission of uniting players worldwide.[1][3][5]
CeleBreak has raised $1.6M in total across 2 funding rounds.
CeleBreak's investors include Downing Ventures, Eoniq.fund, Outrun Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, Juan-Luis Hortelano, World Fund, Andreas Mihalovits, Rene De Jong.
CeleBreak has raised $1.6M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $1.0M Seed in June 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 1, 2022 | $1.0M Seed | Downing Ventures, Eoniq.fund, Outrun Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, Juan-Luis Hortelano | |
| Jun 1, 2021 | $580K Seed | Downing Ventures, Eoniq.fund, Outrun Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, World Fund, Andreas Mihalovits, Juan-Luis Hortelano, Rene De Jong |