
Ysplit
Ysplit is a technology company.
Financial History
Ysplit has raised $217K across 2 funding rounds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Ysplit raised?
Ysplit has raised $217K in total across 2 funding rounds.

Ysplit is a technology company.
Ysplit has raised $217K across 2 funding rounds.
Ysplit has raised $217K in total across 2 funding rounds.
YSplit is a fintech startup that automates expense splitting for shared bills and payments, primarily targeting roommates, friends, and housemates. It builds a mobile app and virtual Visa card that links to utility accounts, subscriptions, and one-time expenses like groceries or restaurant bills, automatically charging each participant's linked bank account their exact share to eliminate IOUs.[1][3][6] Serving college students, young professionals, and shared households, YSplit solves the persistent problem of tracking and chasing repayments for group expenses such as utilities, rent, internet, Netflix, and outings, ensuring bills are paid on time without one person fronting the cost.[1][2][3] The service is free for users, monetizing via 1.3-2% interchange fees on transactions through its card.[1][5] As a Y Combinator W19 company based in San Francisco with a small team of about 3 employees, it has expanded from closed beta (40 households in 2019) to supporting over 5,000 billers across major U.S. utilities and popular subscriptions by 2021, showing steady growth in automation features.[3][4]
YSplit emerged from the personal frustrations of its founders—Tunde Alao (CEO, former Google software engineer handling backend/frontend), Boateng (CTO, UK award-winning tech talent), and Landon—while interning at Google and sharing a house.[1][2] The idea stemmed from their first startup, Cluttr, a U.K. app for organizing shared finances that gained over 30,000 users and an Apple award, with its payment-splitting feature proving most popular.[1][2] Realizing tracking debts wasn't enough, they pivoted in 2019 to automate payments entirely, launching out of Y Combinator (YC W19) with a virtual card prototype for roommate utilities.[1][3][6] Early traction included a closed beta with 40 households, expanding post-YC Demo Day to 500 users, initially focused on U.S. providers before eyeing global growth.[1][2]
YSplit rides the fintech wave of embedded payments and automated personal finance, capitalizing on the rise of shared living among millennials/Gen Z amid housing costs and gig economies, where 30%+ of young adults room-share.[1][2] Timing aligns with post-2019 growth in digital wallets and open banking, enabling seamless bank integrations and virtual cards amid Venmo/Zelle dominance but lacking group automation.[3][5] Market forces like subscription fatigue (average household: 5+ services) and utility volatility favor it, influencing the ecosystem by reducing "payment admin" friction—potentially inspiring B2B expansions for landlords or co-living firms like Common.[2][3] As a YC alum, it contributes to Silicon Valley's push for micro-transaction innovations, though global provider scaling remains a hurdle.[2]
YSplit's automation-first model positions it for expansion into physical cards, international markets, and B2B (e.g., corporate housing), leveraging AI for smarter predictions amid rising shared-economy trends like co-living and group travel apps.[2][3] Upcoming trends—open banking regulations, embedded finance in rentals, and crypto-stablecoin splits—could accelerate growth, evolving its influence from niche roommate tool to universal group payment layer. Watch for partnerships with providers or acquisitions by fintech giants like Plaid, building on its YC roots to redefine "never owe a friend again."[1]
Ysplit has raised $217K in total across 2 funding rounds.
Ysplit's investors include Band of Angels, Bling Capital, Left Lane Capital, Soma Capital, Alexandre Scialom, William Miller, CP Ventures, DCM, GreaterGoodSociety, Great Oaks Venture Capital, LombardStreet Ventures, Wasabi Ventures.
Ysplit has raised $217K across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $150K Seed in March 2019.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 1, 2019 | $150K Seed | Band of Angels, Bling Capital, Left Lane Capital, Soma Capital, Alexandre Scialom, William Miller | |
| Jun 1, 2018 | $67K Seed | CP Ventures, DCM, GreaterGoodSociety, Great Oaks Venture Capital, LombardStreet Ventures, Wasabi Ventures, Anthony Citrano, Greg Kidd, Jason Cahill, Scott Banister |