Facily is a São Paulo-based social commerce platform launched as Latin America's first app enabling group buying deals and interactive shopping experiences.[1][2][3] It builds a gamified marketplace for multi-category consumer goods like groceries, personal care items, household products, and appliances, serving low-income consumers in Brazil who were previously excluded from traditional e-commerce.[1][2][3][4] By leveraging group purchases via WhatsApp communities and China-inspired models, Facily solves access barriers through affordable pricing, differentiated logistics to lower-income neighborhoods, pickup points, flexible payments (including cash), and no shipping fees—while empowering small producers and businesses with broader reach.[1][3] The company has shown strong growth momentum, raising $504.97M total (latest Series D-II $135M three years ago), achieving one of Brazil's top three most-downloaded apps, fastest-growing e-commerce food app globally, and $38.5M revenue with 700 employees.[2][3][4]
Facily was founded in 2018 by Diego Dzodan (CEO), Luciano Freitas, and Vitor Zaninotto in São Paulo, Brazil, targeting the 85% of Brazilians considered low-income who spend 65% of income on food and faced e-commerce exclusion.[3][2][1] The idea emerged from adapting China's group-buying successes to Latin America's WhatsApp-heavy social fabric, aiming to "eliminate barriers of traditional e-commerce" by making online shopping inclusive, profitable for producers, and cheaper for group buyers.[3][1] Early traction came from an asset-light model, proprietary logistics in cities like São Paulo, Belo Horizonte, and Rio de Janeiro, and exponential monthly growth—positioning it as a top app download in Brazil per App Annie data shortly after launch.[3][1]
Facily rides the social commerce wave in Latin America, blending e-commerce with WhatsApp's dominance (sizable user base) and group-buying trends from Asia, amid rising mobile penetration in underserved markets.[1][3] Timing aligns with post-pandemic e-commerce acceleration in Brazil, where low-income exclusion created a massive untapped opportunity—Facily captures this by onboarding first-time shoppers and outpacing competitors like Trela (grocery-focused) or Compra3 (price-reduction networks).[2][3] Market forces favoring it include Brazil's vast low-income population, food cost pressures, and investor interest (backers like Prosus Ventures, Quona Capital), influencing the ecosystem by democratizing access, boosting small producers, and proving social models can scale profitability in emerging markets.[2][3]
Facily's Series D momentum and unicorn trajectory (valued at $850M in 2021) position it for deeper LatAm expansion, potentially beyond Brazil via logistics partnerships and app virality.[3][2] Trends like AI-driven personalization, further social commerce adoption, and economic shifts toward affordability will shape its path, with opportunities in adjacent categories or cross-border group buys. Its influence may evolve from Brazil disruptor to regional leader, redefining inclusive retail—echoing its founding mission to connect the best prices to everyday group buyers.[1][3]
Facily has raised $507.0M in total across 6 funding rounds.
Facily's investors include Bow Capital, Buckley Ventures, DVx Ventures, Eunoia Capital Partners, Goodwater Capital, i/o Ventures, Launch Capital, Liquid 2 Ventures, Niu Ventures, Oak HC/FT, Plug & Play Ventures, Vera Equity.
Facily has raised $507.0M across 6 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $140.0M Series D in December 2021.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 1, 2021 | $140.0M Series D | Bow Capital, Buckley Ventures, DVx Ventures, Eunoia Capital Partners, Goodwater Capital, i/o Ventures, Launch Capital, Liquid 2 Ventures, Niu Ventures, Oak HC/FT, Plug & Play Ventures, Vera Equity, Brandon Krieg, Immad Akhund, Jay Vijayan | |
| Nov 1, 2021 | $250.0M Series D | Addition, Banana Capital, Immad Akhund, William Hockey | |
| May 1, 2021 | $63.0M Series C | Addition, Banana Capital, Immad Akhund, William Hockey | |
| Apr 1, 2021 | $41.0M Series B | Addition, Banana Capital, Immad Akhund, William Hockey | |
| Dec 1, 2019 | $12.0M Series A | Accel, Atman Capital, Broadhaven Capital Partners, Global Founders Capital, Norte Ventures, Quona Capital, Valor Capital Group, Ariel Lambrecht, Guilherme Bonifacio, Justin Mateen | |
| Nov 1, 2019 | $1.0M Seed | 3one4 Capital, Addition, Andreessen Horowitz, Banana Capital, Digital Currency Group, Fifth Wall, Master Ventures Investment Management, monashees, Notable Capital, Chris Larsen, Immad Akhund, William Hockey |