Toss has raised $836.0M in total across 7 funding rounds.
Toss's investors include Broadhaven Capital Partners, DST Global, Goodwater Capital, Tekton Ventures, Bond, Maverick Capital, Jack Boren, Alpaca VC, Matt Ocko, FJ Labs, Grit Capital Partners, Lightbank.
Toss, operated by Viva Republica, is a leading South Korean fintech super-app that provides an all-in-one digital financial platform.[1][3][4] It serves over 28 million users primarily in South Korea by offering seamless services like bank accounts, free peer-to-peer money transfers, financial dashboards, credit score management, customized loans, insurance, investments, bill payments, and business tools such as Toss Payments and Checkout.[1][2][4][5] Toss solves entrenched problems in Korea's complex, regulated banking system—such as cumbersome money transfers and fragmented financial management—by unifying everything into a user-friendly mobile app, driving explosive growth from its P2P origins to a $7.4 billion unicorn valued at billions with $1.653 billion raised.[1][3]
The platform targets everyday consumers for personal finance and small businesses for payments and sales tools, emphasizing safety features like fraud detection and auto-scheduling.[4] Its momentum is evident in rapid user acquisition (20 million by 2021, 28 million by mid-2025), international expansion to Vietnam in 2020, the launch of neobank Toss Bank in 2020, and acquisitions like ride-hailing firm Tada in 2021.[3][5]
Toss was founded in 2013 by Seung-Gun Lee, a former dentist who graduated from a top South Korean dental school but sought greater impact beyond clinical work.[1][2][3] After eight failed ventures, Lee identified a core pain point: sending money digitally in South Korea was "laboriously complex" due to regulatory hurdles and outdated systems.[2][3] He pivoted to mobile fintech, launching Toss in 2014 (or 2015 per some reports) as a simple peer-to-peer payment app akin to Venmo.[1][2][3][5]
Early traction came quickly; Altos Ventures invested first in 2014, followed by heavyweights like PayPal, Sequoia China, GIC, Kleiner Perkins, and Ribbit Capital.[3] By 2018, Toss hit unicorn status after an $80 million round, then raised $410 million in 2021 from Alkeon Capital and Korea Development Bank, totaling $1.653 billion with a latest Series G-III round of $405 million three years ago.[1][3] Pivotal moments include exponential service expansion, Toss Bank's 2020 debut, Vietnam entry, and the Tada acquisition, humanizing Lee's people-first ethos of simplifying daily inconveniences.[2][3]
Toss stands out in fintech through its super-app model, cultural focus, and relentless user-centric innovation:
These elements, combined with Lee's outsider perspective, enable faster iteration and higher engagement than traditional banks.[2]
Toss rides the global super-app and neobank wave, particularly in Asia's mobile-first markets where consumers demand seamless fintech amid legacy banking inertia.[1][2][3] Its timing capitalized on South Korea's high smartphone penetration and regulatory shifts post-2010s, transforming a rigid industry into a digital powerhouse—much like WeChat in China or Grab in Southeast Asia.[2][3] Market forces favoring Toss include rising digital adoption (e.g., post-COVID payments boom), data analytics for personalization, and government support for fintech innovation via funds like Korea Development Bank.[3]
By aggregating services and acquiring players like Tada, Toss influences Korea's ecosystem as a fintech consolidator, boosting startups through partnerships and setting benchmarks for user growth (28 million users) and valuations ($7.4 billion).[3][5] It democratizes finance for "서학개미" (retail investors) with tools like upcoming MTS for global stocks, amplifying retail participation in tech trends.[1]
Toss is poised for hyper-scale expansion, leveraging its 28 million-user base and $1.653 billion war chest to deepen super-app dominance in Korea while scaling internationally—building on Vietnam success and eyeing Southeast Asia or beyond.[1][3] Trends like AI-driven personalization, embedded finance, and regulatory easing for neobanks will propel it, potentially challenging incumbents with innovations in stock brokerage and business services.[1][4][6] Influence may evolve from disruptor to ecosystem orchestrator via more acquisitions and global MTS launches, sustaining its trajectory as Asia's fintech outlier if execution matches its culture.[2][5] This positions Toss to redefine financial empowerment, echoing Lee's initial vision of simplifying the everyday.
Toss has raised $836.0M across 7 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $410.0M Series G in December 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 1, 2022 | $410.0M Series G | Broadhaven Capital Partners, DST Global, Goodwater Capital, Tekton Ventures | |
| Aug 1, 2020 | $170.0M Series F | Broadhaven Capital Partners, DST Global, Goodwater Capital, Tekton Ventures | |
| Aug 1, 2019 | $64.0M Series E | Broadhaven Capital Partners, DST Global, Goodwater Capital, Tekton Ventures | |
| Dec 1, 2018 | $80.0M Series D | Bond, Maverick Capital, Jack Boren | |
| Jun 1, 2018 | $40.0M Series D | Broadhaven Capital Partners, DST Global, Goodwater Capital, Tekton Ventures | |
| Mar 1, 2017 | $48.0M Series C | Alpaca VC, Broadhaven Capital Partners, Matt Ocko, DST Global, FJ Labs, Goodwater Capital, Grit Capital Partners, Lightbank, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Offline Ventures, Palisades Growth Capital, Tekton Ventures, Esther Dyson, Tim Kendall | |
| Apr 1, 2016 | $24.0M Series B | Broadhaven Capital Partners, DST Global, Goodwater Capital, Tekton Ventures |