Tin Can
Tin Can is a technology company.
Financial History
Tin Can has raised $6.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Tin Can raised?
Tin Can has raised $6.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tin Can is a technology company.
Tin Can has raised $6.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Tin Can has raised $6.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tin Can has raised $6.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tin Can's investors include Victor Noguera, Pioneer Square Labs, Evan Moore, Altair Capital Management, Andreessen Horowitz, Antler, Everywhere Ventures (The Fund), Foundamental, Fuel Ventures, Hoxton Ventures, Iterative, Madrona Ventures.
Tin Can is an early-stage direct-to-consumer (D2C) startup building a screen-free, Wi-Fi-enabled landline-style phone designed specifically for kids, allowing voice-only calls to friends and family via a secure, parent-controlled network.[1][2][3] It serves millennial parents seeking to foster their children's social independence without smartphone distractions like texting, games, or internet access, solving the problem of excessive screen time and online risks highlighted in concepts like "The Anxious Generation."[1][4] The product includes customizable security settings through a parents-only companion app and operates on a firewalled member network, with beta testing underway among a couple hundred families across ~15 U.S. states; growth momentum is strong, evidenced by word-of-mouth adoption, a large waitlist, Greylock investment, and a recent $12M funding round to scale production amid soaring demand.[2][4][5]
Tin Can was founded by parents Chet Kittleson (CEO), Max Blumen, and Graeme Davies, who started as a side project because they couldn't find a suitable phone for their own kids—something simple for calling friends without screens or full internet access.[3][4] The idea emerged from a desire to recreate the "magic" of classic landlines in a modern, Wi-Fi-enabled form, beginning with a quick prototype tested in their neighborhood that quickly gained traction through word-of-mouth as kids across the country began using it.[2][3] Pivotal early moments included rapid prototyping, real-world family feedback that lit up kids and reassured parents, a larger-than-expected waitlist, and Greylock's investment recognizing its potential as a "new childhood social graph."[2][4] By mid-2025, they partnered with Saltbox for fulfillment and planned a hard launch for summer 2025, evolving from a basic idea to a branded product with custom handsets, app, and demo video.[1][2]
Tin Can rides the wave of parental backlash against smartphone-induced anxiety, addiction, and social isolation in kids, aligning with cultural shifts like Jonathan Haidt's *The Anxious Generation* and demand for "better technology" that strengthens real-world relationships rather than competing with them.[1][4] Timing is ideal amid rising awareness of youth mental health crises and regulations on kids' tech, with market forces like millennial nostalgia (90s vibes) and D2C scalability favoring simple, analog-feeling hardware.[1][2] It influences the ecosystem by pioneering "constrained tech" as infrastructure—a kid-safe network that could enable future voice-based experiences—challenging Big Tech's engagement-maximizing models and inspiring alternatives in child-focused hardware.[4]
Tin Can is poised to expand from beta to mass-market with its $12M funding fueling manufacturing scale-up, network growth to millions of users, and resolutions to supply chain hurdles, potentially dominating the kid-phone niche as adoption clusters accelerate.[2][5] Trends like analog tech revival, stricter child privacy laws, and demand for distraction-free tools will propel it, evolving from a calling device to a full social platform while staying true to screen-free roots. Its influence could redefine childhood connectivity, proving tech can enable independence without exploitation—turning the landline into tomorrow's essential network and offering parents the antidote they crave.[4]
Tin Can has raised $6.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $4.0M Seed in September 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 1, 2025 | $4.0M Seed | Victor Noguera, Pioneer Square Labs, Evan Moore | |
| Sep 1, 2022 | $2.0M Seed | Altair Capital Management, Andreessen Horowitz, Antler, Victor Noguera, Everywhere Ventures (The Fund), Foundamental, Fuel Ventures, Hoxton Ventures, Iterative, Madrona Ventures, Pioneer Square Labs, Polygon, Uncorrelated Ventures, Balaji Srinivasan, Evan Moore, Prashant Malik, Surojit Chatterjee, Tony Jamous, Will Martin |