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Home»Venture Capital
Payhawk headquarters office with employees collaborating on fintech expense management software

Payhawk targets $100M raise, doubling valuation to $2B

9 January 2026 Venture Capital No Comments5 Mins Read
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Payhawk prepares fresh funding round at $2B valuation

Bulgarian fintech unicorn Payhawk is reportedly in talks to raise around $100 million in new capital at a valuation of approximately $2 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. The move would effectively double the company’s previous valuation and underscore renewed investor confidence in European expense management and corporate card platforms.

Founded in Sofia and now operating across multiple European markets and the United States, Payhawk has positioned itself as a full-stack spend management solution for mid-sized and large enterprises. The prospective round would cement its status as one of Eastern Europe’s most valuable fintech startups and a rare homegrown unicorn from Bulgaria.

From Sofia startup to global fintech unicorn

Payhawk emerged from Bulgaria’s growing technology ecosystem with a mission to simplify how businesses manage company spending. Its platform integrates corporate cards, expense reporting, invoice management, and real-time budgeting into a single interface, targeting finance teams that want to replace disconnected legacy tools and manual processes.

Over the past few years, the company has expanded aggressively across Europe, winning customers in the UK, Germany, Spain, and the Nordics, while also pushing into the US market. The startup’s rapid growth has been driven by demand from companies seeking better control over distributed spending, particularly in hybrid and remote work environments where traditional expense workflows have struggled to keep pace.

Backed by a roster of international venture capital investors, Payhawk previously joined the ranks of European unicorns after a large growth round that pushed its valuation above the $1 billion mark. The potential new financing at a $2 billion valuation suggests that existing and new backers see a clear path to further scale, either as a standalone public company or as a strategic acquisition target for a global financial institution or payments giant.

Why investors are leaning back into expense management

The reported $100 million fundraising effort comes at a time when late-stage funding has been more selective, especially for fintech firms that grew rapidly during the zero-interest-rate era. Yet, spend management has remained one of the more resilient categories, thanks to its direct link to cost optimization and financial visibility.

Enterprise demand for control and compliance

Finance leaders are under pressure to improve cost control, tighten compliance, and generate more granular data on how money is spent across their organizations. Platforms like Payhawk promise to centralize this information, offering real-time dashboards, policy enforcement, and automated workflows that reduce manual reconciliation and fraud risks.

By issuing physical and virtual cards and connecting them to built-in expense policies, Payhawk helps companies set spending limits, approve or reject transactions quickly, and sync data directly with major ERP and accounting software. This positions the company not just as a card issuer, but as a core financial operations system.

Competitive landscape in Europe and beyond

The global market for corporate spend management is highly competitive, with players such as Brex, Ramp, and Airbase in the US, and Pleo, Soldo, and Spendesk in Europe. Payhawk differentiates itself by focusing on larger, more complex customers and by offering deep integrations with existing finance stacks.

Its Eastern European roots have also given the company access to strong engineering talent at competitive cost levels, enabling it to build and iterate quickly while maintaining a capital-efficient profile compared with some of its US counterparts.

Strategic use of the new capital

While the company has not publicly detailed the forthcoming round, industry observers expect the capital to be deployed across several core initiatives that align with its growth ambitions.

Product expansion and AI-driven automation

One likely focus area is expanded product development, particularly around AI-powered automation and data analytics. Modern finance teams increasingly expect tools that can automatically categorize expenses, detect anomalies, and surface insights about spending patterns without heavy manual input.

By embedding more advanced AI algorithms into its platform, Payhawk could boost its value proposition, reduce time-to-close for monthly books, and offer predictive insights on budget overruns or unusual vendor activity. Such capabilities are becoming a key differentiator in the broader financial software market.

Geographic growth and enterprise sales

The fresh funding is also expected to support continued international expansion. The US remains a strategic battleground for fintech spend platforms, but it is also the toughest market, with entrenched incumbents and well-funded challengers. For Payhawk, building a strong on-the-ground sales and customer success presence will be vital to winning larger enterprise contracts.

In Europe, the company is likely to deepen its footprint in key markets such as the UK and Germany while exploring opportunities in underpenetrated regions where local competition is less intense but demand for modern finance tools is rising.

Significance for Bulgaria’s tech ecosystem

The potential $2 billion valuation is a milestone not only for Payhawk but also for Bulgaria’s emerging tech scene. The country has steadily built a reputation as a hub for software engineering, with a growing number of startups attracting international VC interest. A successful up-round at this scale would send a strong signal that globally competitive technology companies can be founded and scaled from Sofia.

For local founders and operators, Payhawk serves as a blueprint: build a product with global relevance, tap into Bulgaria’s deep technical talent pool, and expand early into higher-value markets. For investors, the company’s trajectory could catalyze more capital flows into the region, particularly in B2B SaaS and fintech infrastructure.

What comes next

While details of the round, including participating investors and final terms, have not yet been officially disclosed, the targeted $100 million raise at a $2 billion valuation would mark one of the most significant European fintech deals of 2026 so far. It would also place Payhawk in a strong position to consider future strategic options, including a potential IPO once public markets become more receptive to growth-oriented technology listings.

As the funding environment slowly reopens for high-performing unicorns, all eyes will be on how Payhawk deploys its new capital and whether it can convert investor confidence into sustained global scale.

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