Enter Deal Terms

$ M
Total exit proceeds to equity (millions)
$ M
Preferred investment (millions)
%
Fully diluted, as-converted ownership
X
1X is standard; 2X-3X in tough markets
Non-Participating Preferred
Payout = MIN(Exit, MAX(Pref, Conv))
Investor gets the higher of preference or conversion, capped at exit:
Preference = Investment x Multiple
Conversion = Exit x Ownership %
Ryan O'Connell, CFA
Calculator by Ryan O'Connell, CFA

Exit Payout Analysis

Investor Payout $12.50M 1.25x MOIC
Investor Election: Convert
Conversion value ($12.50M) exceeds preference ($10.00M)
Liquidation Preference $10.00M
Conversion Value $12.50M
Founder Payout $37.50M
Breakeven Exit $40.00M

Formula Breakdown

Investor Payout = MIN(Exit, MAX(Preference, Conversion))
Capped at exit value; investor takes the better of preference or conversion
Model Assumptions
  • Non-participating preferred only (investor chooses preference OR conversion, not both)
  • Single investor class (no stacking of multiple preferred rounds)
  • No accrued dividends or interest on preferred
  • Full liquidation event (100% of company sold)
  • No transaction costs or taxes

For educational purposes. Not financial or legal advice.

How It Works

Scenario Condition Investor Action
Below Breakeven Exit < Breakeven Take Preference
At Breakeven Exit = Breakeven Indifferent
Above Breakeven Exit > Breakeven Convert
Low Exit Exit < Preference Capped at Exit

Understanding Liquidation Preferences

What is a Liquidation Preference?

A liquidation preference is a term in venture capital deals that determines how exit proceeds are distributed between investors and common shareholders (founders, employees). It protects investors by ensuring they get paid before common shareholders in a liquidation event such as a sale, merger, or IPO.

Key Formula
Liquidation Preference = Investment Amount x Preference Multiple
Conversion Value = Exit Value x Ownership %
Investor gets MAX(Preference, Conversion), capped at exit value

Non-Participating vs Participating Preferred

Non-Participating

Choose one: Preference OR Conversion
More founder-friendly. Investor picks the better option but cannot "double dip."

Participating

Get both: Preference AND pro-rata share
More investor-friendly. Investor "double dips" by taking preference first, then sharing remainder.

The Conversion Breakeven

The conversion breakeven is the exit value at which the investor is indifferent between taking preference and converting. Above this point, converting yields more; below it, taking preference is better.

  • Breakeven = Liquidation Preference / Ownership %
  • Example: $10M preference / 25% ownership = $40M breakeven
  • Below $40M: Investor takes $10M preference
  • Above $40M: Investor converts and gets 25% of exit
Founder Tip: Higher preference multiples (2X, 3X) raise the breakeven exit, meaning you need a larger exit before capturing meaningful upside. Negotiate for 1X when possible.

Frequently Asked Questions

A liquidation preference is a term in venture capital deals that determines the order and amount investors receive before common shareholders in a liquidation event (sale, merger, or IPO). With a 1X liquidation preference, the investor gets their original investment back before any proceeds go to common shareholders. This protects investors' downside in mediocre exits while allowing founders to capture upside in successful ones.

With non-participating preferred (modeled in this calculator), investors choose between taking their liquidation preference OR converting to common stock and sharing pro-rata. With participating preferred, investors get their preference first AND then participate in remaining proceeds as if converted to common, effectively "double dipping." Participating preferred is more investor-friendly and can significantly reduce founder returns in moderate exits.

A 1X liquidation preference is standard because it provides downside protection to investors without being overly punitive to founders. It ensures investors get their money back first in a mediocre exit while allowing founders to capture upside in successful exits. Higher multiples (2X, 3X) shift more value to investors and are typically seen in tougher fundraising environments, down rounds, or when investors perceive higher risk.

An investor converts when their ownership percentage of the total exit value exceeds their liquidation preference. This happens at higher exit values. The conversion breakeven is the exit value where preference equals conversion value. Above this point, converting yields more; below it, taking the preference is better. At exactly the breakeven, the investor is economically indifferent between the two options.

The conversion breakeven exit is the exit value at which the liquidation preference equals the conversion value. It is calculated as Liquidation Preference / Ownership Percentage. For example, with a $10M preference and 25% ownership, the breakeven is $40M. Below $40M, the investor takes preference; above $40M, they convert. This is a critical number for founders to understand when evaluating term sheets.

Liquidation preferences directly reduce founder payouts in lower-value exits. When exit value is below the preference, founders may receive nothing. When the investor takes their preference (below breakeven), founders get the remainder. When the investor converts (above breakeven), founders get their ownership percentage of the exit value. Higher preference multiples increase the exit threshold needed before founders see meaningful returns.
Disclaimer

This calculator is for educational purposes only and models simplified non-participating preferred scenarios. Actual VC term sheets involve additional complexity including participating preferred, caps, dividends, multiple investor classes, anti-dilution provisions, and other terms. Consult legal and financial advisors for actual deal structuring.