Funding

Types of Financial Instruments Used in Startups

A complete guide to the financial instruments available to startups — from common equity to SAFEs, convertible notes, venture debt, and beyond.

Nirji Ventures Editorial
Nirji Ventures Editorial
9 min readApril 2025
General informational content. Not investment, legal, or tax advice.

Startups have access to a growing array of financial instruments, each designed for specific stages, needs, and risk profiles. Understanding the full landscape helps founders make informed capital decisions.

What It Means

Financial instruments in startup financing range from simple equity to complex hybrid structures. Each instrument carries different implications for ownership, control, repayment obligations, and investor rights.

Key Instruments

Common Equity: Standard ownership shares held by founders and employees. No special rights or preferences. Preferred Equity: Shares with liquidation preferences, anti-dilution protections, and other investor rights. The standard for VC investment. SAFE Notes: Simple agreements for future equity — no interest, no maturity, converts on priced round. Convertible Notes: Short-term debt that converts to equity — includes interest rate and maturity date. Venture Debt: Term loans for VC-backed companies, typically with warrants attached. Revenue-Based Financing: Repayment tied to a percentage of monthly revenue. Warrants: Rights to purchase equity at a fixed price, often attached to debt instruments. Options (ESOPs): Rights granted to employees to purchase shares at a predetermined price.

Decision Framework

The right instrument depends on stage, capital need, risk tolerance, and investor expectations. Early-stage companies typically use SAFEs or convertible notes. Growth-stage companies use preferred equity and venture debt. Revenue-generating companies can access revenue-based financing.

Nirji Strategic Perspective

Nirji Ventures helps founders navigate the full spectrum of financial instruments. Our advisory includes instrument selection, term negotiation, and cap table modeling. We believe that the most successful founders are those who understand every instrument available to them and choose strategically based on their specific circumstances.

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Navigating this landscape requires expert guidance. Nirji Ventures offers fundraising readiness and startup consulting to help founders and executives make informed decisions.

Explore related insights:

Learn about startup valuation methods for complementary strategic context
Understand how investors evaluate startups to strengthen your approach
Read our guide on investor perspective on SAFEs for deeper analysis
Read our guide on equity vs debt financing for deeper analysis

See how we've delivered results:

Contact our team to discuss how these insights apply to your specific situation.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, legal advice, tax advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security, investment product, or asset. Nirji Ventures Pte. Ltd. is not licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and does not provide regulated investment or financial advisory services. Readers should consult appropriately qualified and licensed professionals before making any decision based on the information herein.

Nirji Ventures Editorial

Written by

Nirji Ventures Editorial

Strategic Advisory

Nirji Ventures is a Singapore-headquartered strategic advisory and business consulting firm with 35+ combined years of advisory experience across 30+ countries. We specialise in business transformation, market entry, venture building, and fundraising readiness.

Put These Insights Into Action

This article is part of Nirji Ventures' commitment to helping founders, executives, and operators make better decisions. Our advisory practice turns frameworks like these into execution — whether you need startup consulting to refine your strategy, fundraising readiness to prepare for capital conversations, or go-to-market strategy consulting to drive traction.

Companies at different stages benefit from different capabilities. Growth-stage operators often engage our strategic advisory practice for partnership and transition planning, while enterprises leverage our business transformation and financial consulting services. For international opportunities, explore our global expansion advisory.

See real-world results in our case studies, or continue reading in our insights library for more research and frameworks.

Frequently Asked Questions

What financial instruments are available to startups?

Key instruments include common equity, preferred equity, SAFE notes, convertible notes, venture debt, revenue-based financing, warrants, and employee stock options.

Which instrument is best for early-stage startups?

SAFEs and convertible notes are most common for pre-seed and seed stages due to their simplicity and speed.

What is the difference between SAFEs and convertible notes?

SAFEs are not debt and have no interest or maturity. Convertible notes are debt instruments with interest rates and maturity dates.

When should startups use venture debt?

Venture debt is appropriate after raising equity, when the company has revenue traction and wants to extend runway without further dilution.

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