Digital banking startup Mercury has raised $300 million in primary and secondary funding at a $3.5 billion post-money valuation, the company confirmed to TechCrunch on Wednesday.
The valuation is more than double the startup’s valuation when it last raised capital – a $120 million Series B round in 2021 that valued the company at $1.62 billion post-money.
Sequoia led the latest round – a Series C – alongside existing backers Coatue, CRV, Andreessen Horowitz and new investors Spark Capital and Marathon. It’s the first check that Sequoia has written into Mercury since the startup was founded in 2017. The raise brings Mercury’s total primary and secondary funding to $500 million. The company declined to break down how much of the Series C was primary, and how much was secondary.
Mercury CEO and co-founder Immad Akhund told TechCrunch that the startup notched $500 million in revenue in 2024, and that it has seen 10 consecutive quarters of profitability on both EBITDA and GAAP net income.
The company counts over 200,000 companies as customers and claims it has seen 40% year-over-year customer growth. Akhund declined to share revenue figures from previous years but noted that its payment volume increased by 64% to $156 billion. Its customers range in size, according to Akhund, and include tech companies such as Linear, Phantom, and ElevenLabs, venture capital firms, e-commerce companies and a range of small businesses.
Mercury launched its first corporate credit card in 2022. Last May, Mercury told TechCrunch that it was layering software onto its bank accounts, giving its business customers the ability to pay bills, invoice customers and reimburse employees. Those additional features put the company in even more direct competition with the likes of Brex and Ramp, two rival fintechs that have for years been fighting for market share in an increasingly crowded space.
Mercury will be eyeing acquisitions with its new capital, Akhund said.
The startup was embroiled in drama with partner bank Evolve Bank & Trust and embattled BaaS startup Synapse in recent years. On March 12, Mercury announced that it had decided to end its relationship with Evolve and migrate customers to its other bank partners.
Mercury’s Series C raise is believed to be the largest fintech funding round announced this year, one that is also seeing Klarna prepare to go public.