Fintech Reference Deck

TradeUp / Fynn Seed deck

Trade-school financing company that began with income share agreements and later became Fynn, a private-loan platform for vocational education.

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TradeUp / Fynn deck contact sheet

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Current Status

Active, raised after deck, useful fintech benchmark

Y Combinator marks Fynn active with team size 26; TechCrunch and AlleyWatch reported an $11M seed plus $25M debt facility in 2023; PRWeb reported 270 programs and more than $14M in assistance by August 2023.

Checked 2026-06-21
Active as Fynn

Operating Status

Y Combinator marks Fynn active with team size 26; TechCrunch and AlleyWatch reported an $11M seed plus $25M debt facility in 2023; PRWeb reported 270 programs and more than $14M in assistance by August 2023.

Headcount

Team Signal

YC lists team size 26; Dealroom and public snippets list 11-50

Qualified Benchmark

Benchmark Status

TradeUp/Fynn is the strongest Fintech batch benchmark: it raised institutional seed capital, secured a debt facility, remained active under a renamed brand, and retained the original wedge around trade-school financing.

Student lending / trade-school financing - Seed deck

TradeUp / Fynn

Trade-school financing company that began with income share agreements and later became Fynn, a private-loan platform for vocational education.

FintechEdtechStudent lendingYCQualified
Deck Pages
17
2023 Funding
$36M
Team
26

Funding Raised

TradeUp / Fynn funding chart

Y-axis is dollar amount raised; x-axis is year. Debt facilities are separated from equity when applicable.

Research Brief

Qualified Benchmark

TradeUp/Fynn is the strongest Fintech batch benchmark: it raised institutional seed capital, secured a debt facility, remained active under a renamed brand, and retained the original wedge around trade-school financing.

Reference StatusQualified Benchmark

Active, raised after deck, useful fintech benchmark

Best Reference Uses

  • Clear articulation of why trade-school students fall through federal and private lending gaps.
  • Strong aligned-incentives argument around repayment tied to employment outcomes.
  • Beachhead sizing around trade schools not qualifying for federal funding.
  • Useful evolution case: deck-era ISA thesis became a more compliant loan product.

Watch Outs

  • The deck's ISA framing later shifted toward private student loans / income-protection loans.
  • Consumer-credit and education-finance regulation should be clearer in founder feedback.
  • Funding graph should distinguish equity seed from debt facility.
  • Market sizing should connect deployed dollars to loss rates, servicing, and school acquisition.

Deck Contact Sheet

TradeUp / Fynn deck contact sheet