Enter Values

$ M
Projected company value at exit
$ M
Amount being invested this round
%
VC hurdle rate (30-50% typical for early-stage)
years
Expected holding period
%
Expected dilution from future rounds
VC Method Formula
Post-Money = Exit Value / (1 + r)n
r = Required return | n = Years to exit
Ryan O'Connell, CFA
Calculator by Ryan O'Connell, CFA

Required Current Ownership

Ownership Needed Today 15.37% Likely Viable
Post-Money $46.48M
Pre-Money $41.48M
Final Ownership 10.76%
Retention Ratio 70%

Formula Breakdown

Current Ownership = Final Ownership / Retention Ratio
Step-by-step calculation

Ownership Interpretation

Required Ownership Assessment Notes
< 50% Likely Viable Founders retain majority control
50% - 70% Watch Carefully High ownership may concern founders
≥ 70% Difficult Deal structure likely needs revision

Model Assumptions

  • Single investment round (no staged financing)
  • Exit value is known/projected with certainty
  • Required return is constant over holding period
  • Future dilution estimate is accurate
  • No dividends or interim distributions
  • No liquidation preferences or participation rights

Understanding the Venture Capital Method

What is the VC Method?

The Venture Capital Method is a valuation approach used by VCs to determine how much ownership they need in a startup. It works backward from a projected exit value, discounts it to present value using a target IRR (hurdle rate), and calculates the ownership percentage required to achieve that return.

VC Method Formulas
Post-Money: Exit Value / (1 + r)n
Pre-Money: Post-Money - Investment
Final Ownership: Investment / Post-Money
Current Ownership: Final Ownership / (1 - Dilution)

Why Adjust for Dilution?

Future financing rounds will dilute your ownership stake. The retention ratio (1 minus cumulative dilution) adjusts for this. For example, if you expect 30% total dilution, your retention ratio is 0.70, meaning you need 1.43x the final ownership percentage today to end up with your target stake at exit.

Important: Dilution compounds across rounds. Two 20% rounds mean 0.8 x 0.8 = 0.64 retention (36% dilution), not 0.60 (40% dilution).

When to Use VC Method vs. DCF

VC Method

Early-stage startups
Unpredictable cash flows, focus on exit scenarios and multiples. Single success-case valuation.

DCF Method

Mature companies
Stable, forecastable cash flows. Detailed financial projections available.

Limitations

  • Relies on a single exit scenario (no probability weighting)
  • Assumes exit value can be accurately projected
  • Does not account for liquidation preferences or participation rights
  • Target IRR is a hurdle rate, not a true cost of capital
  • Ignores path dependency and timing of cash flows
Alternative: The First Chicago Method addresses some limitations by weighting multiple scenarios (success, sideways, failure) rather than assuming a single outcome.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Venture Capital Method is a valuation approach used by VCs to determine how much ownership they need in a startup. It works backward from a projected exit value, discounts it to present value using a target IRR (hurdle rate), and calculates the ownership percentage required to achieve that return. This method focuses on a single success-scenario exit rather than probability-weighted cash flows.

Early-stage VCs typically target 30-50% IRR as a hurdle rate, while growth-stage investors may accept 20-30%. These figures represent the return threshold VCs use for deal screening, not the realized LP returns or true opportunity cost of capital. Higher perceived risk leads to higher required returns.

Future dilution reduces your ownership stake over time, so you need more ownership today to end up with enough at exit. The retention ratio (1 minus cumulative dilution) adjusts for this. For example, if you expect 30% total dilution, your retention ratio is 0.70, meaning you need 1.43x the final ownership percentage today. Note: dilution compounds - two 20% rounds mean 0.8 x 0.8 = 0.64 retention, not 0.60.

Deals requiring majority ownership are typically a negotiation red flag. Founders generally resist giving up control, and such deals may indicate the valuation expectations are too aggressive or the investment amount is too large relative to company value. Consider adjusting exit assumptions, staging the investment, or accepting different terms.

Pre-money valuation is the company's value before the investment; post-money valuation includes the new investment. The relationship is: Post-Money = Pre-Money + Investment. In the VC Method, post-money is calculated first by discounting exit value, then pre-money is derived by subtracting the investment amount.

The VC Method works best for early-stage startups with unpredictable cash flows where you can estimate an exit value but not detailed financials. DCF is better for mature companies with stable, forecastable cash flows. The First Chicago Method bridges these approaches by weighting multiple scenarios (success, sideways, failure), making it useful when outcome uncertainty is high but you want more nuance than a single exit scenario.
Disclaimer

This calculator is for educational purposes only. The VC Method provides a simplified view of startup valuation that does not account for liquidation preferences, participation rights, anti-dilution provisions, or multiple financing scenarios. Actual deal terms and valuations require professional analysis. This tool should not be used as the sole basis for investment decisions.

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