Kholoud Hussein
Startups often outpace their financial capacity. Product traction accelerates, customer acquisition rises, and new markets open faster than revenue arrives. At that point, founders face a familiar dilemma: raise more equity and dilute ownership, or borrow and take on repayment pressure. Between these two paths lies a middle option that is less discussed but increasingly relevant in maturing startup ecosystems: mezzanine financing.
Mezzanine financing is a hybrid form of capital that blends features of debt and equity. It is structured as a loan, but one that can convert into equity if the borrower fails to meet certain repayment terms. It sits “in the middle” of the capital stack — senior to equity but subordinate to traditional bank loans, hence the name “mezzanine.”
For banks, mezzanine loans are too risky. For venture capitalists, they are a way to invest without immediately giving up equity. And for founders, they offer growth capital at a stage where cash needs rise sharply but equity dilution feels increasingly costly.
What Exactly Is Mezzanine Financing?
In practical terms, mezzanine financing starts as debt with a higher interest rate than a bank loan. The higher rate reflects the higher risk. But unlike traditional debt, mezzanine lenders often receive “equity kickers” such as warrants or the right to convert part of the loan into shares later. This hybrid structure gives investors the upside potential of equity with the repayment priority of debt.
The main components of mezzanine financing include:
- A loan with flexible terms
- Interest payments, sometimes deferred
- Equity-linked features
- Subordination to senior debt
This structure is designed to help growing companies bridge the gap between early venture rounds and full-scale profitability.
Why Startups Consider Mezzanine Capital
Startups typically encounter mezzanine financing when they reach the scale-up stage. At this point, the business has traction, predictable revenue, and a clear path to expansion — but needs significant capital to accelerate growth.
Choosing mezzanine financing can make sense for several reasons.
First, avoiding equity dilution.
By raising mezzanine capital instead of equity, founders keep a larger share of the company. This matters especially when valuations are not rising as quickly as expected, or when the founders want to postpone a large dilution event until performance strengthens.
Second, accelerating expansion.
Mezzanine financing is often used to fund acquisitions, new market entries, major hiring rounds, or infrastructure investment — areas where speed matters. The flexibility of mezzanine capital lets startups pursue these opportunities without waiting for the next traditional funding round.
Third, bridging to profitability.
For startups close to break-even, mezzanine capital provides the boost needed to reach sustainable cash flow. It acts as a financial bridge between growth and self-sufficiency.
The Risks Behind the Flexibility
Mezzanine financing is not without trade-offs. Its biggest drawback is cost. Interest rates are significantly higher than bank loans, and equity warrants mean founders may still give up shares in the future. This makes mezzanine capital more expensive than both traditional debt and early-stage equity.
Another risk is pressure. While interest payments can sometimes be deferred, the debt still sits on the balance sheet. If growth slows or revenue falls below projections, repayment becomes challenging. In extreme cases, lenders can convert debt into equity, diluting founders under less favorable conditions.
Because of this, mezzanine financing is suitable only for companies with predictable revenue streams — not for early-stage startups still validating their business model.
Why Mezzanine Capital Is Becoming More Common
As startup ecosystems mature, especially in markets like the GCC, founders increasingly look for financing beyond traditional venture capital. Investors, meanwhile, seek structures that reduce risk while retaining upside. Mezzanine financing meets both needs.
In more established markets such as the United States and Europe, mezzanine funds have been common for decades, especially among later-stage startups and growth companies. The rise of private credit globally has made mezzanine-style instruments more accessible to tech companies expanding rapidly but not yet ready for public markets.
Where Mezzanine Financing Fits in a Startup’s Lifecycle
In the typical startup journey, mezzanine capital sits between:
- Series B–C equity rounds, and
- Large-scale expansion, acquisitions, or pre-IPO growth.
It comes after venture capital has validated the product and business model, but before the company achieves the cash flow stability of a mature enterprise. At this stage, the valuation may not yet justify a major equity round, but the business requires real capital to scale.
Founders often pursue mezzanine financing when:
- Growth is strong
- Revenue is predictable
- The company wants to maintain ownership control
- Traditional loans are unavailable
- Equity rounds would cause heavy dilution
A Tool for Mature Startups, Not Young Ones
Mezzanine financing is not for seed-stage founders. It is a tool for companies that have grown beyond early volatility and are entering a phase where capital efficiency matters. The ideal candidate is a startup with stable revenue, healthy gross margins, and a clear expansion strategy.
To conclude, mezzanine financing occupies a unique space in the funding landscape. It gives founders capital to expand without giving up major equity — but at a cost. It gives investors downside protection through debt, and upside potential through equity features. And it becomes especially relevant as startup ecosystems mature and companies seek alternatives to traditional funding structures.
For the right startup, mezzanine financing is a strategic tool that supports aggressive growth while preserving ownership. For the wrong startup, it can become an expensive strain.
As Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and wider GCC markets continue to develop more sophisticated financial instruments, mezzanine financing will likely become more familiar to founders. Understanding how it works — and when to use it — can be a decisive factor for startups aiming to scale in competitive, fast-growing markets.
