May 26th, 2026 | By: Ryan RutanCMO | Tags: Funding Stages, Angel Investor, Venture Capital, Micro Vc, Lead Investor
Check size is the amount an investor commits in a single round, used as a primary differentiator between investor types. Typical ranges: angel $10K-$250K, super-angel $50K-$500K, micro-VC $100K-$2M, traditional Series A VC $2M-$15M, growth-stage VC $10M-$50M+, mega-fund $50M-$500M+ at growth stage. It is a key parameter in fundraising strategy because targeting the wrong-check-size investor for your round size wastes time on both sides. It is one of the most-basic but most-mismatched dimensions of investor targeting.
The typical ranges by investor type and stage:
The minimum check problem: every fund has a minimum check size driven by fund economics. A $500M Series A fund might have a $5M minimum check (deploying $500M across 20 investments at $25M average each); they literally can't write a $1M check because the math doesn't work. Founders targeting fund-stage mismatches waste time on both sides; verify each fund's minimum and typical check before pitching. The maximum check problem: most funds also have maximum check ceilings, driven by portfolio construction (a fund won't put more than ~10% of its capital in any single investment). A $200M fund's max single check is typically ~$20M. The follow-on capacity question: separate from initial check size, funds reserve capital for follow-on investments in winners. Smaller funds run out of follow-on capacity quickly; larger funds can keep investing.
Ryan's Take
Check size is the basic parameter that most founders don't properly research before pitching. They send the same deck to a $5B Tiger Global fund and a $50M micro-VC, when the same $3M Series A is too big for one fund's strategy and too small for the other's. The fix is simple but rarely done: before pitching, look at the fund's recent investment activity, find the median check size and the range, and verify your round size fits within their minimum-to-maximum window. If it doesn't, don't pitch; you'll waste both sides' time and damage the relationship for future rounds.
What founders get wrong: Pitching funds whose check size doesn't fit the round being raised. A $200M fund needs to write $5M+ checks to deploy meaningful capital; pitching them for a $1M seed wastes their time and yours. A $50M micro-VC can't write $10M checks; pitching them for a Series A lead is similarly mismatched. Research before pitching.
Related: [Angel Investor] · [Venture Capital] · [Micro-VC] · [Lead Investor]
What is check size? The amount an investor commits in a single round, used as a primary differentiator between investor types (angel $10K-$250K, micro-VC $100K-$2M, traditional VC $1M-$25M+, growth-stage $10M-$50M+, mega-fund $50M-$500M+). A key parameter in fundraising strategy.
What are typical check sizes by stage? Individual angel: $10K-$50K. Super-angel: $50K-$500K. Micro-VC: $100K-$2M. Seed-stage VC: $500K-$3M. Series A VC: $2M-$15M. Series B VC: $10M-$30M. Series C+ VC: $20M-$100M+. Growth-stage funds: $30M-$300M+. Mega-fund/sovereign: $100M-$1B+ at very late stage.
Why do funds have minimum check sizes? Fund economics. A $500M fund deploying $500M across 20 investments needs ~$25M average checks; a $5M minimum makes sense to maintain portfolio construction. Funds literally can't write $1M checks if doing so means deploying across 500 investments. The check-size constraint is structural, not preferential. Research each fund's range before pitching.
Founding Partner @ Startups.com platform | Clarity.fm, Launchrock, Fundable, Zirtual, and Co-Host of The Startup Therapy Podcast. Ryan has 15 years of experience as a Founder, Advisor, Mentor, and Investor — the quintessential startup guerrilla. He works with 100's of the best startups every year on everything from ideation, idea validation, early marketing traction, customer acquisition to fundraising, scaling, and operations.
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