Does it cost anything to be an investor on AngelList?

It's free to gain access to investing on AngelList. However, when investors make an investment, some portion of the capital they contribute is retained by the investment vehicle to cover setup, management, and/or administrative fees. These fees are specific to each Fund or SPV and are explained during the closing process. Additionally, if the investment returns a profit, a portion of that profit ("carried interest") is retained by the fund lead or the investment advisor.

Syndicates

When investing in an SPV, investors typically pay a portion of the setup cost as described above (proportional to their investment amount) and carried interest to the lead or the investment advisor. In rare cases, there is no setup fee or carry.

Here is an example of a standard syndicate structure. Note that the syndicate you're investing in might have a different structure.

  • A syndicate has a $92k allocation to invest in ACME, Inc.
  • The setup fees are $8k.
  • The carry is 20%.
  • Thus, the syndicate is raising $100k in order to make a $92k investment into ACME.
  • The syndicate raises from 10 investors, each investing $10k.
  • Since each investor contributes 10% to the syndicate, each is covering 10% of the setup fee. In other words, of the $10k contributed by each investor, $800 goes towards setup fees, whereas $9,200 go to ACME.
  • Five years later, ACME gets acquired and the syndicate receives a $500k payout.
  • Now, each investor receives back their full investment first ($10k each, so $100k total). Of the remaining $400k, $80k is retained as carry (20%), and $320k is distributed to investors.
  • In total, each investor receives back $42k ($10k + 10% of $320k).

Venture Funds

When investing in a venture fund, investors generally pay a management fee and carried interest to the fund lead.

  • Management fees are usually 2% of the fund's total amount.
  • Carry is generally 20%

For Example:

  • An investor invests $100k into a $1M fund.
  • The fund lead receives a $20k management fee (2% of $1M), and the investor in question pays $2k (10% of $20k), leaving $98k to go towards the investable capital.
  • Imagine the fund has a positive return, and the investor is allocated a distribution of $1M. The investor receives the amount they invested ($100k), and then 80% of the remainder (80% of $900k = $720k).
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