Ramp has raised $22.5 billion in valuation across two funding rounds just two months apart, cementing its position as one of the fastest-growing fintech companies challenging American Express in the corporate credit card market. The six-year-old startup, which crossed $1 billion in annualized revenue in August and serves over 45,000 businesses, is leveraging AI-powered automation to transform how companies manage expenses and spending—positioning itself to capture market share from established financial giants with a 169-year head start.
The big picture: Ramp has evolved from a simple corporate credit card company into a comprehensive financial platform that promises to save businesses time through automated expense management, bill payments, and AI-driven policy enforcement.
- The company now generates more than half its contribution profit from non-card revenue streams, including subscription services for expense management, procurement, and travel booking.
- Ramp’s “policy agents” use AI to automatically approve employee expenses against company policies, reducing manual review from 100% of receipts to just 10% for some customers.
- The platform processes transaction data to identify spending patterns and cost-saving opportunities across organizations.
Why this matters: Ramp represents a fundamental shift in corporate finance from rewards-based systems to cost-reduction focused solutions, arriving at a time when companies are increasingly obsessed with efficiency and automation.
- The startup accounts for just 1.5% of the $2 trillion U.S. corporate credit card market, leaving enormous room for growth.
- Unlike traditional card companies that profit from rewards programs, Ramp offers flat 1.5% cash back while building revenue through software subscriptions and transaction fees.
- The company’s AI-first approach gives it a technological advantage over established players still running pilot programs.
Key milestones: Ramp’s journey from startup to unicorn happened with unprecedented speed for a New York-based tech company.
- Founded in 2019 by Eric Glyman and Karim Atiyeh after they left Capital One, a major credit card company, where they had sold their previous startup Paribus.
- Reached unicorn status ($1.6 billion valuation) within exactly two years, as promised by cofounder Atiyeh to early employee Calvin Lee.
- Achieved $100 million run rate within three years and crossed $1 billion annualized revenue in August 2024.
The funding frenzy: Ramp’s rapid valuation increase from $16 billion to $22.5 billion in two months has drawn both praise and skepticism from investors.
- The July Series E was led by Founders Fund, followed by an August Series E-2 led by Iconiq, with new investors including Sutter Hill Ventures, T. Rowe Price, and Google Ventures.
- Nearly every funding round has been led by insider investors who previously backed the company, with Founders Fund leading five rounds total.
- One former investor told Fortune that Ramp’s public market valuation would likely be “less than half” of its current private valuation.
What they’re saying: Industry leaders and investors express confidence in Ramp’s potential despite the aggressive valuation.
- “You don’t have to squint to see a $100 billion company,” says Kareem Zaki, partner at Thrive Capital, a venture capital firm.
- Keith Rabois of Founders Fund believes Ramp could go public within a year: “Venture is a power law business, and there’s a power law within the power law. If you find phenomenal founders, the best you can do is double and triple down.”
- Former American Express CEO Ken Chenault, now an investor and advisor: “What they’re doing with AI is a massive accelerant. The valuation that they’re at now, they’re going to have to be a really big company for it to work. But it can work, and it will work.”
Competitive challenges: Ramp faces significant hurdles in expanding beyond its small and midsize business base to capture enterprise customers and international markets.
- Competitor executives note that larger companies prefer best-in-breed solutions rather than all-in-one platforms, particularly for travel and expense management.
- The company’s current customer base includes venture and private equity firms that recommend Ramp to portfolio companies, but enterprise sales require different strategies.
- Existing enterprise customers include CBRE, a real estate giant, and Shopify, demonstrating some upmarket traction.
AI ambitions: Ramp is positioning artificial intelligence as its key differentiator, with plans to automate increasingly complex financial tasks.
- Current AI features include policy agents that automatically approve expenses and receipt processing that eliminates manual expense reports.
- Future products will automatically code work lunch receipts by reading employee calendars and inboxes, book travel based on schedules, and recommend quarterly department budgets.
- The company employs 1,200 people and is using new funding primarily to expand its engineering team for AI development.
Government opportunity: Ramp is pursuing federal contracts that could significantly expand its market reach, though political connections have drawn scrutiny.
- The company is involved in a proposal process with about 20 other companies for a General Services Administration pilot contract worth tens of billions annually.
- Several core investors have close ties to the Trump administration and support Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) cost-cutting efforts.
- Glyman says he has “no political agenda” and that venture funds weren’t involved in connecting Ramp with government agencies.
Ramp is taking aim at American Express by upending corporate credit cards. Can the $22.5 billion startup live up to the hype?