Y Combinator (winter 2025 batch)

Deadline:
As soon as possible
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Deadline: As soon as possible

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Location(s)

  • United States of America
San Francisco

Overview

Y Combinator provides seed funding for startups. Seed funding is the earliest stage of venture funding. It pays your expenses while you’re getting started. 

Y Combinator is accepting applications for the Winter 2025 Batch funding cycle. The batch will take place from January to March in San Francisco.

The deadline to apply on-time is November 12. If you apply late, we will still consider the application but can't promise exactly when we'll get back to you.

Details

Y Combinator provides seed funding for startups. Seed funding is the earliest stage of venture funding. It pays your expenses while you’re getting started.

Some companies may need no more than seed funding. Others will go through several rounds. There is no right answer; how much funding you need depends on the kind of company you start.

At Y Combinator, our goal is to get you through the first phase. This usually means: get you to the point where you’ve built something impressive enough to raise money on a larger scale. Then we can introduce you to later stage investors—or occasionally even acquirers.

MORE THAN MONEY

We make small investments in return for small stakes in the companies we fund.

All venture investors supply some combination of money and help. In our case the money is by far the smaller component. In fact, many of the startups we fund don’t need the money. We think of the money we invest as more like financial aid in college: it’s so people who do need the money can pay their living expenses while Y Combinator is happening.

What happens at Y Combinator? The most important thing we do is work with startups on their ideas. We’re hackers ourselves, and we’ve spent a lot of time figuring out how to make things people want. So we can usually see fairly quickly the direction in which a small idea should be expanded, or the point at which to begin attacking a large but vague one.

The questions at this stage range from apparently minor (what to call the company) to frighteningly ambitious (the long-term plan for world domination). Over the course of three months we usually manage to help founders come up with initial answers to all of them.

The second most important thing we do is help founders deal with investors and acquirers. Yes, we can make introductions, but that part is easy. We spend much more time teaching founders how to pitch their startups to investors, and how to close a deal once they’ve generated interest. In the second phase we supply not just advice but protection; potential investors are more likely to treat you well if you come from YC, because how they treat you determines whether in the future we’ll steer deals toward or away from them.

We also get the startups we fund incorporated properly with all the standard paperwork, avoiding legal time-bombs that could cause serious hassles and delays later. We introduce founders to lawyers who will often agree to defer payment for legal work. We regularly help startups find and hire their first employees. We can help with intellectual property questions, like what to patent, and when. One of the least publicized things we do, for obvious reasons, is mediate disputes between founders. No startup thinks they’re going to need that, but most do at some point.

The kind of advice we give literally can’t be bought, because anyone qualified to give it is already rich. You can only get it from investors.

FORMAT

Twice a year, we invest a small amount of money in a large number of startups. We have two batches per year – one from January through March and one from June through August.

To apply to Y Combinator, you just fill out an application form. We invite the most promising groups to meet us in person, and we make funding decisions immediately afterward.

The YC program lasts for three months. During those three months, founders participate in group office hours every two weeks and can meet with partners for office hours as often as needed.

During the batch, we host a weekly talk at Y Combinator, where we invite an expert in some aspect of startups to speak. Typically, speakers include startup founders, venture capitalists, and executives from well-known technology companies.

About ten weeks in, we host Demo Day where all the startups can present their products and services to a specially selected audience of investors and press.

Y Combinator is occasionally described as a boot camp, but this is not really accurate. We probably get called that because we fund a lot of startups at once, and most have to move to participate. But the similarities end there; the atmosphere is the opposite of regimented.

Funding startups in batches works better for everyone. It’s more efficient for us, and better for the startups, who probably end up helping one another at least as much as we help them.

Because we fund such large numbers of startups, Y Combinator has a huge alumni network, and there’s a strong ethos of helping out fellow YC founders. So whatever your problem, whether you need beta testers, a place to stay in another city, advice about a browser bug, or a connection to a particular company, there’s a good chance someone in the network can help you.

PHILOSOPHY

We think founders are most productive when they can spend most of their time building. Our goal is to create an environment where you can focus exclusively on building product and talking to users.

We seem to have succeeded in creating a good environment, because many founders have told us that the first ten weeks of Y Combinator were the most productive period of their lives.

We try to interfere as little as possible in the startups we fund. We don’t take board seats or many of the other powers investors sometimes require. We offer lots of advice, but we can’t force anyone to take it. We realize that independence is one of the reasons people want to start startups in the first place. And frankly, it’s also one of the reasons startups succeed. Investors who try to control the companies they fund often end up destroying them.

Why are we so flexible? Our goal is to be the preferred source of seed funding for startups, and to be that we have to do right by everyone. The good founders all know one another, so if the groups we fund feel they’re getting a bad deal, no one will want funding from us in the future. And later stage investors (especially VCs) also tend to know one another, so if the companies we seed end up being broken in any way, no one will want to invest in them in the future.

So far we seem to be on track, because both the startups we’ve funded and their next round of investors seem happy with us.

Apply to Y Combinator

  1. If you want to apply, please submit your application online.
  2. People who apply before the regular deadline will hear back by December 18. If you apply after the deadline, we'll still consider the application but can't promise exactly when we'll get back to you.
  3. We encourage you to submit your application as soon as you’re ready to apply.
  4. If your application is promising, we will invite you to interview with us. Most interviews will be held by video conference in November and early December. We typically make decisions the same day as your interview, and we give everyone who interviews detailed feedback on our decision.
  5. We invest in companies as soon as they are accepted; we do not wait for the batch to start.

About the batch

The batch will take place in-person at YC's campus in San Francisco. It starts with a 3-day, in-person kick-off and features weekly meetups in San Francisco. For more information, please read our FAQs.

During the batch, we invite eminent people from the startup world to speak. The founders of Airbnb, Stripe, Doordash, and Reddit often come back to tell the inside story of what happened in the early days of their startups.

Every company works with a dedicated YC Group Partner, who gets to know them well and can help with a wide range of issues.  Every YC Group Partner is a successful startup founder themselves, has advised hundreds of startups, and works closely with a small group of startups they personally hand-select every batch.  YC companies are in a direct slack channel with their group partner and meet weekly during the batch.

Similar to how many universities have a house model, each YC batch is actually several small, autonomous groups of companies. You go through YC as part of this small group of companies, have dinner with them each week, and build both personal and professional relationships. Many founders build lifelong friendships with the founders in their group.

During and after the batch, we introduce founders to people who can help with any challenge. Often, this means founders of other YC companies. Today, The YC alumni community is one of the most powerful communities in the world, and its members have a strong commitment to help one another.

Towards the end of the batch, we help companies raise additional funds by introducing them to YC’s extensive network of investors.  

YC doesn't end after 3 months. We continue to help founders for the life of their company, and beyond — and so does the YC alumni community. 

Opportunity is About


Eligibility

Candidates should be from:


Description of Ideal Candidate

How do we choose which startups to fund?

We’ll fund companies from anywhere in the world. We fund companies doing everything from building mobile apps to diagnosing cancer.

We’ll happily fund companies that just started and have nothing more than an idea. And we’ve funded companies that had over $20M in annual revenue and over 50 employees.

International founders, please note: if your company is already incorporated somewhere other than the United States, Canada, Singapore or the Cayman Islands, in order to participate in YC you will need to create a parent company that is in one of those jurisdictions. The existing company will then become a subsidiary of the new United States, Canada, Singapore or Cayman parent company. While lawyers will drive this process, it will require a significant effort on your part.

You must have at least 10% equity in the startup to be considered a founder by Y Combinator. Only founders can come to interviews if invited or attend batch events if accepted.


Dates

Deadline: As soon as possible


Cost/funding for participants

YC’S STANDARD DEAL

We have a standard deal for every company that is accepted to Y Combinator. We invest $500,000, and our investment gives YC 7% of your company plus an incremental equity amount that will be fixed when you raise money from other investors.

The YC investment is not contingent on hitting any milestones, and we do not wait until the batch program starts to invest. The day a company is accepted to YC, we commit to investing our standard deal and begin the process to do so immediately.

In addition to the YC investment, YC companies receive access to a wide range of resources. Here is a full list of the benefits and resources available to YC founders.

THE MATH

The way it works is this: we invest $500,000. $125,000 of our investment converts into a fixed 7%, and the other $375,000 is invested on an uncapped MFN safe.

If you’re not familiar with uncapped MFN safes, here’s a quick example. In a typical scenario where you raise your next safes at a $15M post-money valuation cap, the $375,000 MFN safe would convert into $375,000 / $15,000,000 = 2.5% of the company.

YC also gets a right to continue to invest in subsequent rounds of financing you raise (a “pro rata” right). In many cases we have invested millions of dollars in companies by continuing to support them in later rounds.

Finally, it’s sometimes hard to compare offers from different accelerators. Importantly, we don’t charge any fees to the companies to be part of YC. We understand the complex reasons that cause some accelerators to charge fees to the companies that participate in their programs, and while we don’t think it’s bad behavior, obviously founders should deduct those fees from the investment when they’re thinking about those offers. We also try hard to avoid any “gotcha” terms like enhanced returns in downside exit scenarios and similar provisions.

DETAILS OF THE INVESTMENT

This section sets out the details and mechanics of YC’s investment, for those who are interested.

Our $500K investment is made on 2 separate safes at the same time, with an accompanying YC Agreement:

  • We invest $125,000 on a post-money safe in return for 7% of your company (the “$125k safe”)

  • We invest $375,000 on an uncapped safe with a Most Favored Nation (“MFN”) provision (the “MFN safe”)

  • The YC Agreement sets out some YC-specific guidelines and rights, including a participation right to invest in the company’s future financing rounds.

In this Safe Conversion Financing, assuming all of the company’s outstanding Safes were issued on a post-money basis, 3 things will happen simultaneously in the round - though the calculations are ordered specifically, as follows:

  1. All Safes and other convertible instruments convert into preferred shares

  2. A stock option pool is created or increased to a pre-agreed percentage of the company

  3. New money is invested in the company

YC’s $125k Safe will convert in the priced round into 7% of the company’s equity (including any existing option pool) after all the Safes and other convertible instruments have converted in conjunction with the priced round.

YC’s MFN Safe will automatically convert in the priced round on the terms of the lowest cap Safe (or other most favorable terms, such as a discount) issued between the specific MFN start date (around the start of the batch) and the priced round.

The priced round itself, and the creation or increase of the stock option pool, will dilute YC’s ownership.

The pro rata right, mentioned above, means YC has the right to purchase a portion of the new money securities issued in the financing in order to help maintain our ownership stake. If we exercise the pro rata right, step #3 then includes our additional new money investment.

Additional Future Financing Rounds: When you conduct subsequent rounds of financing, we continue to have a participation right to help maintain our ownership stake.

INCORPORATING

We invest in US, Cayman, Singapore, and Canada corporations. If you haven’t incorporated a company yet, don’t worry about it; we will help you do that if you are accepted to YC.

We have startups that apply to YC from all around the world and many have already incorporated in their home countries. If you’ve already incorporated your startup in another country that is not one of the those above four, you will need to “flip” your corporate structure to have a parent company in one of the four countries. In these cases, we introduce founders to lawyers who can work out the best process for doing this. Often, the original entity will become a subsidiary of a new parent company and will continue to operate in the startup’s home country; the parent company will be the ultimate owner of all your startup’s intellectual property and assets, but IP can be held at the subsidiary or parent level – that’s your choice.

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