Gynger
Gynger is a technology company.
Financial History
Gynger has raised $32.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Gynger raised?
Gynger has raised $32.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Gynger is a technology company.
Gynger has raised $32.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Gynger has raised $32.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Gynger has raised $32.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Gynger's investors include 01 Advisors, Addition, Animal Capital, Cocoa, Deciens Capital, Felicis Ventures, Flash Ventures, Gradient Ventures, Lazerow Ventures, Northzone, Obvious Ventures, Pareto Holdings.
Gynger is an AI-powered embedded financing platform that enables businesses to finance technology purchases, offering flexible payment terms for software and infrastructure expenses from vendors like AWS, Google Cloud, Okta, and Snowflake[1][2][3][4]. It serves both buyers—helping startups and enterprises manage cash flow by deferring payments—and sellers (B2B tech vendors)—allowing them to get paid upfront while offering customized terms, with features like real-time AR intelligence and automated workflows[1][2][4]. Founded in 2021 in New York, Gynger solves the "catch-22" of growth: needing top tools to scale but constrained by cash, providing non-dilutive capital without warrants, fees, or personal guarantees, and has facilitated thousands of payments with over $100 million in contracts closed[2][3][4][5].
The platform's growth momentum includes a $20M Series A in June 2024 led by PayPal Ventures (total VC funding: $31.7M) plus a $100M debt facility, partnerships like with Soluna Holdings for AI computing, and rapid adoption across industries[1][3][5].
Gynger was founded in 2021 by Mark Ghermezian, a serial entrepreneur and co-founder/former CEO of Braze (now a $4B+ public company), who identified the startup dilemma of needing premium software to grow while preserving cash[2][3]. Based in New York, the idea emerged from Ghermezian's experience: "It's impossible to launch a company today without software and infrastructure," leading to a founder-friendly solution combining software with capital for the tech stack[3]. Key early moments include launching out of stealth in December 2022 (TechCrunch coverage) and securing the $20M Series A plus $100M debt in June 2024 to scale in the tech purchasing market[3][5].
Gynger rides the embedded finance wave in tech, where "buy now, pay later" (BNPL) extends to B2B software amid rising SaaS spend and cash crunches for startups scaling AI and cloud infrastructure[1][3][5]. Timing aligns with post-2022 market recovery, enabling non-dilutive funding as VC tightens; market forces like explosive tech stack costs (e.g., AWS, Snowflake) favor it, with competitors like Pipe and Clearco focusing narrower on SaaS revenue[1]. It influences the ecosystem by making green data centers (e.g., Soluna partnership) and cybersecurity accessible, powering startup growth without dilution and helping vendors like Salesforce unlock revenue faster[1][2][4].
Gynger is positioned to dominate tech BNPL as AI-driven approvals and integrations scale, potentially expanding to more verticals like AI hardware amid surging compute demands. Trends like real-time AR AI and embedded capital will shape it, evolving its influence from startup enabler to enterprise standard—tying back to its core mission of fueling tech-fueled growth without the cash flow drag.
Gynger has raised $32.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $20.0M Series A in June 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 1, 2024 | $20.0M Series A | 01 Advisors, Addition, Animal Capital, Cocoa, Deciens Capital, Felicis Ventures, Flash Ventures, Gradient Ventures, Lazerow Ventures, Northzone, Obvious Ventures, Pareto Holdings, Polychain Capital, REMUS Capital, Rethink Impact, Tiger Global Management, Tribe Capital, Vine Ventures LP, Andrej Henkler, Andy Leaver, Asif Moosani, Griffin Johnson, Tom Blomfield | |
| Dec 1, 2022 | $12.0M Seed | Baukunst, Bolt, Cocoa, Deciens Capital, DNX Ventures, Felicis Ventures, Flash Ventures, Flex Capital, Flybridge Capital Partners, Gradient Ventures, Humba Ventures, MAGIC Fund, Northzone, Nyca Partners, Polychain Capital, Precursor Ventures, QED Investors, Recharge Capital, Reciprocal Ventures, Tet Ventures, Trajectory Ventures, Tribe Capital, Unusual Ventures, Vera Equity, Andrej Henkler, Andy Leaver, Asif Moosani, Charles Delingpole, Jason Lemkin, Louis Beryl, Mark Ghermezian, Tom Blomfield |