Pennylane secures €175 million to scale its financial OS for European SMEs
Pennylane, the Paris-based fintech unicorn positioning itself as the central financial operating system for European small and medium-sized enterprises, has announced a new funding round of €175 million. The fresh capital will be used to accelerate product development, deepen automation capabilities and expand its footprint across Europe’s fragmented SME finance market.
By consolidating accounting, invoicing, cash-flow management and financial reporting into a single platform, Pennylane aims to replace the patchwork of legacy tools and spreadsheets still used by many small businesses and their accounting firms. The company’s long-term ambition is to become the default infrastructure layer through which European SMEs run their day-to-day finances.
A unified financial OS for Europe’s small businesses
European SMEs often juggle multiple disconnected systems: bank portals, invoicing software, payroll tools, and separate accounting packages. This fragmentation makes it difficult to maintain real-time visibility on cash flow, profitability and tax obligations. Pennylane tackles this by building an integrated financial OS that connects directly with banks, payment providers and accounting workflows.
Through its platform, business owners and finance teams can issue invoices, track payments, categorize expenses and collaborate with their external accountants in a single interface. This real-time collaboration model reduces manual data entry, lowers the risk of errors and shortens the time between financial events and decision-making.
Bridging SMEs and accounting firms
A key differentiator for Pennylane is its dual focus on both SMEs and accounting practices. Rather than treating accountants as an afterthought, the platform is built so that professionals can manage multiple clients, automate reconciliations and standardize workflows across their portfolio.
This approach positions Pennylane not only as a tool for entrepreneurs, but as infrastructure for the broader accounting ecosystem, giving it a powerful network effect. As more accountants adopt the platform, more SMEs are encouraged to onboard, and vice versa.
Funding to accelerate product and AI-driven automation
The newly announced €175 million funding round marks a significant milestone in the company’s growth trajectory. The capital will be directed primarily toward accelerating product investment, with a particular emphasis on AI-powered automation and advanced data analytics.
Pennylane is expected to deepen its use of machine learning to automatically categorize transactions, detect anomalies, and surface insights that help SMEs make better financial decisions. Enhancing AI algorithms for tasks such as invoice matching, expense recognition and cash-flow forecasting can materially reduce the time small businesses spend on routine financial administration.
Roadmap: from financial visibility to decision intelligence
With more capital available, the company is likely to move beyond simple dashboards and into what many in the industry describe as financial decision intelligence. That means not just reporting what has happened, but recommending what to do next: when to collect receivables more aggressively, when to negotiate payment terms, or when to seek external financing.
As interest rates and inflation continue to pressure margins across Europe, tools that can help SMEs optimize working capital and anticipate liquidity gaps are increasingly seen as mission-critical rather than optional add-ons.
Riding the wave of European fintech and SME digitisation
The funding round underscores investor confidence in Europe’s fintech sector and the ongoing digitisation of SME finance. Despite economic uncertainty, small businesses are under mounting pressure to modernize their financial operations, comply with evolving tax regulations and maintain tighter control over costs.
Solutions like Pennylane benefit from several structural trends: the widespread adoption of open banking APIs, the gradual rollout of e-invoicing mandates in multiple European countries, and the growing comfort of SMEs with cloud-based financial tools. These tailwinds are expanding the addressable market for integrated financial platforms.
Competitive landscape and differentiation
The space is increasingly competitive, with regional and global players offering accounting software, invoicing tools and cash-flow apps. However, Pennylane differentiates itself by positioning as a comprehensive financial OS rather than a single-purpose tool. Its deep integrations with accountants, banks and tax authorities could make it harder for point solutions to displace.
Moreover, by focusing on European regulatory and tax complexities from the outset, the company can tailor workflows and compliance features to local markets, something generic global platforms often struggle to match.
Strategic priorities after the €175 million raise
With the new capital injection, Pennylane is poised to execute on several strategic priorities:
- Product expansion: adding more advanced modules for budgeting, scenario planning and multi-entity consolidation tailored to growing SMEs.
- Deeper automation: extending AI algorithms to cover more of the bookkeeping lifecycle, from document capture to reconciliation and reporting.
- Geographic growth: scaling beyond its core French base into other major European SME hubs, supported by localized tax and compliance features.
- Partnerships: strengthening ties with banks, neobanks and payment service providers to embed Pennylane into existing financial journeys.
As the company grows, maintaining high standards of data security, regulatory compliance and customer support will be critical to sustaining trust among both SMEs and professional accountants.
What this means for European SMEs
For Europe’s millions of small and medium-sized businesses, the rise of platforms like Pennylane signals a shift from reactive bookkeeping to proactive financial management. Instead of waiting weeks or months for updated accounts, owners can gain near real-time visibility into revenues, costs and liquidity.
If Pennylane successfully executes on its vision of a unified financial OS, SMEs could spend less time on manual financial administration and more time on growth, innovation and customer relationships. The latest €175 million funding round gives the Paris-based unicorn the resources to push that transformation forward across the European market.

