Funding

Venture Debt: A Strategic Alternative for High-Growth Founders

Venture debt is gaining traction in Asia as a non-dilutive financing tool. For founders who want to extend runway, fund specific initiatives, or bridge to the next equity round without giving up ownership, venture debt offers a compelling alternative.

Nirji Ventures Research
9 min readFebruary 2026

What is Venture Debt?

Venture debt is a form of debt financing available to venture-backed startups. Unlike traditional bank loans, venture debt is underwritten based on the company's venture backing, growth trajectory, and future fundraising potential — not just cash flows or assets.

Why Venture Debt in 2026?

Dilution Concerns

After multiple equity rounds, founders often hold 15-25% of their companies at Series B. Further dilution is painful. Venture debt provides $2-5M of capital without any equity dilution.

Extended Runway

An additional 6-12 months of runway (from venture debt) can be the difference between raising the next equity round at a good valuation vs. a down round.

Strategic Flexibility

Venture debt funds specific initiatives — product launches, market expansion, equipment purchases — without the governance overhead of equity investors.

How Venture Debt Works

Typical Terms

Loan size: 25-35% of last equity round (e.g., $2.5-3.5M on a $10M Series A)
Interest rate: 10-14% annually
Maturity: 24-36 months
Repayment: 6-12 months interest-only, then principal + interest
Warrant coverage: 0.5-2% of equity (much less dilutive than an equity round)
Covenants: Typically light — minimum cash balance, revenue milestones

Collateral

Venture debt is typically secured by all company assets (IP, receivables, equipment), but lenders' primary security is the expected future equity raise.

When Venture Debt Makes Sense

Best Use Cases

1.Bridge financing: Extend runway 6-12 months to achieve milestones for a stronger equity raise
2.Growth capital: Fund specific revenue-generating initiatives (sales team expansion, market entry)
3.Equipment financing: Capital-intensive purchases (servers, manufacturing equipment, lab equipment)
4.Working capital: Manage cash flow gaps in businesses with long sales cycles or seasonal revenue

When to Avoid

1.Pre-product-market fit: Too risky; you need equity capital for exploration
2.Unclear path to next equity round: Debt without a repayment strategy is dangerous
3.Deteriorating metrics: If growth is slowing, debt can accelerate the death spiral
4.Excessive existing debt: Adding leverage to an already-leveraged company is risky

The Asian Venture Debt Landscape

India

India has the most developed venture debt market in Asia:

Dedicated players: Alteria Capital, InnoVen Capital, Trifecta Capital, Stride Ventures
Market size: $1.5 billion annually (2025)
Maturity: Well-understood by founders and VCs; standard part of the financing toolkit

Singapore / SEA

The SEA venture debt market is emerging:

Players: Genesis Alternative Ventures, InnoVen Capital, HSBC Innovation Banking
Market size: $500 million annually (growing 40% year-over-year)
Opportunity: Significant unmet demand as more startups reach the stage where venture debt is appropriate

Japan

Nascent market: Venture debt is still uncommon in Japan
Cultural factors: Debt carries more stigma in Japanese business culture
Growing interest: Next-generation founders are more open to creative financing structures

Negotiating Venture Debt

Key Negotiation Points

1.Interest rate: Negotiate based on your cash runway, revenue growth, and investor backing
2.Warrant coverage: Push for lower warrant percentages; some lenders will go to 0.25% for strong companies
3.Covenants: Ensure covenants are achievable under realistic growth scenarios, not just best-case
4.Prepayment terms: Negotiate reasonable prepayment penalties (ideally declining over time)
5.Draw schedule: Negotiate flexibility to draw capital in tranches rather than all at once

Building Lender Relationships

Start conversations 6-12 months before you need capital
Share monthly financial updates to build confidence
Introduce your venture debt lender to your equity investors (mutual trust matters)
Maintain transparency about challenges — lenders respect honesty

Strategic Framework for Combining Equity and Debt

The Optimal Capital Stack

For a typical growth-stage startup:

Equity: Fund product development, team building, and market expansion
Venture debt: Fund specific growth initiatives, bridge to next round, and manage working capital
Revenue-based financing: Fund marketing spend with predictable ROI

Timing

Raise venture debt within 6-9 months of closing an equity round:

Your cash position is strong (better terms)
Your metrics show post-fundraise momentum
You have runway to absorb debt service costs
Lenders are most willing when you have equity backing and strong 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 negotiating with investors to strengthen your approach
Read our guide on 2026 founder's fundraising playbook for deeper analysis
Read our guide on ESG as a funding requirement for deeper analysis

See how we've delivered results:

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

Written by

Nirji Ventures Research

Research & Strategy

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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Frequently Asked Questions

What is venture debt and how is it different from traditional bank loans?

Venture debt is underwritten based on a startup's venture backing and growth trajectory rather than cash flows. It provides non-dilutive capital with warrant coverage of only 0.5-2% equity.

When should founders use venture debt?

Best for bridge financing, funding specific growth initiatives, equipment purchases, and working capital management. Avoid pre-PMF, with unclear paths to next equity round, or with deteriorating metrics.

How large is the venture debt market in Asia?

India leads with $1.5 billion annually, SEA at $500 million (growing 40% YoY), while Japan remains nascent. The overall market is expanding rapidly as founders seek non-dilutive capital.

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