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Friday Finance is a Berlin-based financial technology company that develops comprehensive cash flow management and banking consolidation software for small and medium-sized businesses. The enterprise provides a centralized platform enabling internal finance teams, accountants, and fractional chief financial officers to unify fragmented financial data and automate workflows across multiple corporate bank accounts. Operating within the European business software market, the organization focuses on streamlining liquidity tracking and financial reporting processes to improve operational efficiency. To support its technological development, the company has secured approximately $23 million in total venture capital funding from a syndicate of notable institutional investors. This financial backing includes investments from prominent venture capital firms such as Molten Ventures, Speedinvest, Sequoia Capital, and Entrée Capital. Friday Finance was officially established in 2021 by co-founders Chris Zemina and Patrick de Castro Neuhaus.
Friday Finance has raised $23.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Friday Finance has raised $23.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Friday Finance has raised $23.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Friday Finance's investors include 500 Global, Acrew Capital, Curie.Bio, Eurazeo, Footwork, Founder Collective, Freestyle Capital, Hambro Perks, Index Ventures, K2 Global, Kearny Jackson, Kickstart Fund.
Friday Finance has raised $23.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $20.0M Series A in June 2022.
Friday Finance is a Berlin-based fintech company that built a next-generation financial management platform for European startups and SMBs, automating pre-accounting tasks like invoice approvals, reconciliations, bill payments, and spend management via integrated banking, corporate cards, and cash flow tools.[1][2][3] It served businesses struggling with fragmented, time-consuming finance admin—saving users an average of 12-20 hours per week/month—through a single user-friendly interface connected to over 2,000 banks including Deutsche Bank, HSBC, and PayPal.[2][3][4] With estimated annual revenue of $22.7M, 108 employees (up 8% YoY), and a $20M Series A in 2022, it showed strong growth momentum before Pliant announced its acquisition in 2023, after which Friday Finance ended independent operations.[1][3][4][6]
Founded in 2021 in Berlin by Christopher Zemina (CEO) and Patrick de Castro Neuhaus (CTO), Friday Finance emerged from founders' frustrations with fragmented business banking while scaling startups—Chris advising growing companies, Patrick building his own.[2][3] Originally launched as Airbank, it rebranded to Friday Finance and quickly gained traction: 95% of users set up in 30 minutes, integrations with major banks, and early funding from investors like Entrepreneur First, Speedinvest, Fin Capital, and Calm/Storm Ventures.[3][4] Pivotal moments included the $20M Series A in mid-2022 led by Molten Ventures (with New Wave, angels like Brex/Ramp advisors), fueling product expansion and team growth amid rising demand for automated finance tools.[4]
Friday Finance rode the fintech automation wave in Europe, targeting SMB/startup pain points amid fragmented banking and rising compliance demands post-open banking regs like PSD2.[2][4] Timing was ideal: post-2021 funding boom amplified need for efficient back-office tools as businesses scaled amid economic headwinds, with market forces like digital transformation and VC interest in "integrated platforms" (per Molten Ventures) favoring all-in-one solutions over siloed apps.[4] It influenced the ecosystem by accelerating pre-accounting standards, inspiring competitors, and bridging startups to VCs like Calm/Storm—though its 2023 Pliant acquisition consolidated it into larger platforms amid maturing fintech M&A trends.[2][3][6]
Post-2023 Pliant acquisition, Friday Finance's tech now bolsters Pliant's corporate credit/expenses stack, likely enhancing automation for broader European SMBs amid tightening economic pressures.[6] Trends like AI-driven forecasting and embedded finance will shape its legacy, evolving influence via Pliant toward fully autonomous finance hubs—potentially redefining how startups reclaim time for growth, much like its original mission to conquer "finance chaos."[1][2]