Chloe Ladwig/PitchBook
Startup valuations in news headlines donāt always match the price every VC paid behind the scenes.
While letting investors in the same funding round at different valuations isnāt a new invention, the AI boom has enabled some founders to play favorites in this way. And VCs tell PitchBook theyāre seeing an uptick in this practice lately, often to reward early believers in a startup, funding round leads, or top investors.
āFor investors who committed early, despite the risk, and committed to providing real value to the founders beyond cashārather than piggybacking on othersā convictionsāa tranche round creates value and meritocracy in the AI era,ā said Josh Constine, a venture partner at SignalFire. āThe best founders have abundant access to competing capital, giving them more leverage to define the valuations than when the capital was scarce, and there wasnāt a massive technology shift opening up huge opportunities that investors are looking for.ā
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The practice hit the online VC discourse earlier this month when Mercor co-founder Brendan Foody accused Sequoia of using two-tranche rounds to inflate headline valuations. Sequoia partner Shaun Maguire responded that the firm splits its check only when rivals will pay more than it will for a hot deal.
Recent venture rounds with such structures include vibe-coder Lovableās Series A last July, and AI-native IT startup Servalās Series B round in December, according to PitchBook data. Servalās December round, led by Sequoia at a $1 billion valuation, combined two classes of preferred shares priced at different valuations in the same deal. The Wall Street Journal reported that Sequoiaās lowest Serval entry valued the company at less than $400 million, under half the headline figure.
Representatives for the startups did not return requests for comment.
That said, VCs squeezing into the round and paying a premium for that privilege is risky, said Kyle Stanford, PitchBookās director of US venture capital research. AI startups raised $255.5 billion globally in the first quarter of 2026, surpassing the full-year 2025 total in a single quarter, according to PitchBookās Q1 2026 AI VC Trends report. With demand running that hot, paying up for access can be the only way onto a coveted cap table.
Some VCs taking the higher valuation are happy to be included in a round that otherwise may have been closed off to them.
āItās definitely been a theme that weāve seen,ā said Mike Paulus, founder and CEO of PCM Encore. āThereās always been a value to having a Sequoia or a Benchmark as the lead investor, both in terms of the name and the signaling. [Investors] rolling up their sleeves has always meant a lot, and in a way, everyone else got to come in the roundājust not on identical terms, while doing a lot less work and arguably adding a lot less value.ā
Lead VCs are taking upward of two-thirds of rounds, according to new Carta data. Thereās āa growing awarenessā among top VCs leading rounds to push for better terms in return for the greater risk theyāre taking via high-conviction bets on larger check sizes, said Ashley Neville, Cartaās director of insights.
āRounds are being so oversubscribed that founders are able to come to the table and say, āWe are selling more of the company for more money,āā Neville said. āVCs are just so eager to get on the cap table.ā
Still, founders do have to navigate delicate relationships when forcing some VCs into worse economics on their investments. This is a large part of the reason why tranched rounds have historically been a rare occurrence. The practice was nearly impossible in venture capitalās last bear market, when VCs had the upper hand and many startups took whatever they could get.
āIf I was raising capital, I would have a really hard time letting two different people invest, at the same time, at different valuations,ā Paulus said. āItās kind of head-exploding. And thatās probably the reason why itās still relatively rare.ā
SignalFire has landed preferred equity terms as a lead investor in some startups it has worked closely with on tech buildouts and also hiring, Constine saidāthough he declined to share specifics.
āIt certainly can affect relationships with new investors,ā he said. āYou want to start off that partnership with every side feeling good and all-in on supporting the company. If an investor is so sour about somebody elseās valuation, and they donāt feel like theyāre excited about supporting the company, then they probably donāt make sense as a lead.ā
This article originally appeared on PitchBook News
