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Startup valuation calculator

Estimate your pre-money valuation using three proven methods. Compare results and find a realistic range for your fundraise.

Estimate your valuation

Choose a method and adjust the inputs to see your estimated pre-money valuation

Rate your startup against typical seed-stage companies. Each factor is weighted by importance to investors.

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Estimated valuation

€2.5M

Pre-money valuation estimate

Method comparison

Scorecard method€2.5M
VC method€3.3M
Berkus method€950K

Average across all three methods

€2.3M

Why use this calculator?

Three proven methods

Compare Scorecard, VC, and Berkus methods side by side to find a realistic valuation range.

Side-by-side comparison

See how each method values your startup and use the average as a starting point for negotiations.

Built for early-stage

These methods are designed for pre-revenue and early-revenue startups where traditional DCF models do not apply.

How to value a startup before revenue

Valuing an early-stage startup is one of the hardest parts of fundraising. Without years of revenue data, founders and investors rely on comparative methods, milestone-based approaches, and expected return calculations. This calculator implements three of the most widely used early-stage valuation methods.

The Scorecard method

Developed by Bill Payne, the Scorecard method compares your startup against typical seed-stage companies. You rate yourself across seven weighted factors (team, market, product, competition, marketing, investment needs, and other). The weighted score is multiplied by a typical seed valuation in your region to produce an estimate.

The Venture Capital method

Pre-money valuation = Expected exit value / Target ROI multiple

The VC method works backwards from the investor's perspective. If an investor expects your company to exit at a certain value and needs a specific return on their investment, the maximum they would pay today is the exit value divided by their target multiple. Typical VC target multiples range from 10x to 30x depending on stage and risk.

The Berkus method

Created by angel investor Dave Berkus, this method assigns value to five key risk-reducing milestones, each worth up to 500K. The idea is that a pre-revenue startup's value comes from reducing risk: having a sound idea, a working prototype, a quality team, strategic relationships, and early sales or rollout progress. The maximum pre-revenue valuation under this method is 2.5M.

Tips for valuation conversations

  1. Use multiple methods and present a range. No single method gives the definitive answer.
  2. Research comparable deals in your market and stage. Actual transaction data beats theoretical models.
  3. Your valuation is only real when someone writes a check. Focus on finding the right investor, not the highest number.
  4. Consider the full deal structure. Valuation is important, but terms like liquidation preferences and anti-dilution matter just as much.

Frequently asked questions

What is pre-money valuation?

Pre-money valuation is the estimated worth of your startup before receiving new investment. It determines how much equity investors get for their money. For example, if your pre-money valuation is 2M and an investor puts in 500K, the post-money valuation is 2.5M and the investor owns 20%.

Which valuation method should I use?

Each method works best in different situations. The Scorecard method is good for pre-revenue startups, comparing you against typical seed deals. The VC method works when you have a realistic exit scenario in mind. The Berkus method is useful for early-stage startups where you want to assign value to specific risk-reducing milestones. Using all three and averaging the results gives you a reasonable range.

How accurate are these valuation estimates?

Early-stage startup valuation is more art than science. These methods give you a starting point for negotiations, not a definitive answer. Your actual valuation will depend on market conditions, investor interest, comparable deals, and your negotiating position. Use these estimates as a reference range when preparing for fundraising conversations.

What factors affect startup valuation the most?

The biggest factors are team experience, market size and growth, traction (revenue, users, or other metrics), competitive landscape, and the broader funding environment. A strong team in a large market with early traction will command higher valuations. Geography also matters: valuations in Silicon Valley tend to be higher than in other markets.

How do I negotiate valuation with investors?

Come prepared with data: comparable deals in your space, your traction metrics, and results from multiple valuation methods. Focus on the overall deal structure, not just the headline number. Consider the value the investor brings beyond money. Having multiple term sheets gives you the strongest negotiating position.

Related resources

Pre-money valuation
Full glossary definition
Post-money valuation
How post-money is calculated
Dilution calculator
Model equity after funding rounds
Term sheets
Key terms and what they mean
Pitch deck by stage
What investors expect at each stage
Full glossary
100+ startup terms defined

Ready to raise your round?

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