Funding

Venture Debt Explained for Founders

Everything founders need to know about venture debt — how it works, when to use it, key terms, and how it complements equity financing.

Nirji Ventures Editorial
Nirji Ventures Editorial
8 min readApril 2025

Venture debt is a specialised form of debt financing designed for venture-backed startups. Unlike traditional bank loans, venture debt is available to companies that may not yet be profitable, relying instead on VC backing and growth trajectory as underwriting criteria.

What It Means

Venture debt typically comes as a term loan of 3-4 years, often with an interest-only period followed by amortisation. Lenders also receive warrants — the right to purchase equity at a fixed price — as additional compensation for the risk. The loan amount is usually 25-50% of the last equity round raised.

When It Is Used

Venture debt is most commonly used after a Series A or later equity round to extend runway without additional dilution. It is also used for specific capital expenditures, working capital needs, or to bridge to the next equity milestone.

Key Terms

Interest Rate: Typically 8-15% annually, higher than traditional bank lending. Warrants: Usually 0.1-0.5% of fully diluted equity. Covenants: Financial and operational requirements the borrower must maintain. Draw Period: The window during which the startup can access the loan facility.

Decision Framework

Venture debt is appropriate when: the startup has recently raised equity, revenue is growing, the capital need is time-bound, and the founder wants to minimise further dilution. It is risky when: revenue is unpredictable, the company is burning cash rapidly, or the next equity round is uncertain.

Nirji Strategic Perspective

Nirji Ventures helps founders evaluate venture debt opportunities in the context of their overall capital strategy. We negotiate terms, evaluate lender proposals, and ensure that venture debt complements rather than constrains the company's growth trajectory.

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Navigating this landscape requires expert guidance. Nirji Ventures offers fundraising advisory 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 equity vs debt financing for deeper analysis
Read our guide on hybrid financing models for deeper analysis

See how we've delivered results:

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

Nirji Ventures Editorial

Written by

Nirji Ventures Editorial

Strategic Advisory

Nirji Ventures is a Singapore-based investment banking and strategic advisory firm with 35+ years of experience across 30+ countries. We specialise in M&A advisory, capital raising, startup consulting, and business transformation.

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

Companies at different stages benefit from different capabilities. Growth-stage businesses often engage our investment banking practice for M&A and capital raising, while enterprises leverage our business transformation and financial advisory services. For international opportunities, explore our global expansion advisory.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is venture debt?

Venture debt is specialised debt financing for VC-backed startups, typically structured as a term loan with warrants.

How much venture debt can a startup raise?

Typically 25-50% of the last equity round raised, depending on the lender and company metrics.

What are warrants in venture debt?

Warrants give the lender the right to purchase equity at a fixed price, typically representing 0.1-0.5% of fully diluted equity.

When is venture debt risky?

Venture debt is risky when revenue is unpredictable, cash burn is high, or the next equity round is uncertain.

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