Participating Preferred

May 27th, 2026   |    By: Ryan RutanCMO    |    Tags: Equity & Ownership, Non-Participating Preferred, Liquidation Preference, Preferred Stock, Liquidation Waterfall, Term Sheet

Participating Preferred

Participating preferred is the preferred-stock structure where investors receive both their liquidation preference AND share in remaining proceeds alongside common stockholders. The double-dip compares to standard non-participating preferred (where investors choose between preference OR as-converted share, whichever is higher), making participating preferred investor-friendly and founder-unfriendly, increasingly rare in modern venture rounds except in distressed financings. It is the preferred-stock structure founders should treat as a red flag in term sheets.

The mechanics:

Standard non-participating preferred (modern default):

  • Investor takes the higher of: (a) liquidation preference OR (b) as-converted share of proceeds.
  • Investor effectively chooses between debt-like (preference) and equity-like (as-converted) treatment.

Participating preferred:

  • Investor takes BOTH: (a) liquidation preference AND (b) as-converted share of remaining proceeds.
  • "Double dip" because investor gets paid twice on the same investment.

Capped participating:

  • Compromise structure: participation capped at a defined multiple (e.g., 3x of investment).
  • Beyond the cap, investor converts to common and takes pro-rata.
  • Less aggressive than uncapped participating but still investor-friendly.

Concrete example:

$10M Series A invested at $40M post-money for 25% ownership. Company sells for $100M.

Non-participating preferred (modern standard):

  • Investor takes higher of: $10M preference OR 25% of $100M = $25M.
  • Investor takes $25M (as-converted).
  • Common holders share remaining $75M pro-rata.

Participating preferred (uncapped):

  • Investor takes $10M preference, then 25% of remaining $90M = $22.5M.
  • Total: $32.5M.
  • Common holders share remaining $67.5M.

Capped participating (3x cap):

  • Investor takes up to 3x = $30M total.
  • Above $30M, investor converts to common.
  • More moderate than uncapped participating.

Why founders resist participating preferred:

Significant founder dilution at exit: in moderate exits, participating preferred extracts more value than non-participating.

Pricing distortion: investors using participating preferred can pay higher valuations because they extract more at exit, distorting price comparisons.

Stacks with multiple preferred series: Series A + Series B + Series C all participating = significant common dilution at exit.

Investor signal: requesting participating preferred suggests the investor doesn't believe in the upside scenario where preference-conversion makes them whole.

Modern usage:

  • Standard rounds: non-participating preferred. Participating is non-market.
  • Distressed financings: participating sometimes the price of survival.
  • Aggressive investor positioning: some investors test participating in initial term sheets.

Ryan's Take

Participating preferred is the term I'd walk away from in standard venture rounds. Modern norms heavily favor non- participating; investors requesting participating are signaling something unusual. The discipline: insist on non-participating preferred at every priced round. If participating is the only path (distressed financing), push for capped participating (3-4x cap) instead of uncapped, and model the math at various exit values to understand what you're signing up for.

What founders get wrong: Accepting participating preferred in standard rounds because they don't fully model the exit math. The right discipline: insist on non-participating; if participating, push for capped (3-4x); model exit math at various valuations.

Related: [Non-Participating Preferred] · [Liquidation Preference] · [Preferred Stock] · [Liquidation Waterfall] · [Term Sheet]

FAQ

What is participating preferred? A preferred stock structure where investors receive both their liquidation preference (typically 1x of investment) AND share in remaining proceeds alongside common stockholders. Effectively "double-dipping" compared to non-participating preferred.

How is participating different from non-participating preferred? Non-participating: investor takes higher of preference OR as-converted share. Participating: investor takes both preference AND share of remainder. Participating extracts more value from exits, especially at moderate exit values.

Should I accept participating preferred? In standard venture rounds: no. Modern norms favor non-participating. Investors requesting participating are signaling unusual positioning. In distressed financings, participating may be the price of capital; push for capped participating (3-4x) rather than uncapped.


About the Author

Ryan Rutan

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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