waterfalls
Last updated
Quick Answer
Investor Catch-Up is a metric sponsors and LP finance teams use in waterfall and distribution economics to make ownership, evidence, timing, and the next decision clear.
Investor Catch-Up is a metric in the waterfall and distribution economics workflow. It gives the sponsor, operator, or fund administrator a named control for the specific decision, evidence record, stakeholder expectation, and follow-up step behind the process. A useful Investor Catch-Up page should explain what the term means, where it appears in the documents or operating cadence, which party owns it, and how mistakes show up in closing, reporting, funding, or post-close execution.
In Practice
Example: A sponsor uses Investor Catch-Up while managing waterfall and distribution economics so investors, lenders, counsel, administrators, or operators can see what has been decided, what evidence supports it, who owns the next step, and what could delay execution.
Why It Matters
Investor Catch-Up matters because the legal language, model formula, reserve policy, capital accounts, and distribution notice must produce the same payout answer. Without a clear definition and operating record, teams can use the same word while assuming different economics, documents, deadlines, or responsibilities.
VC Beast Take
SponsorBeast treats Investor Catch-Up as a practical operating concept inside Waterfalls. The useful test is whether it helps a sponsor make a better decision, reduce execution risk, or communicate more clearly with investors and operators. For SponsorBeast, the useful version explains how Investor Catch-Up changes return of capital, preferred return, catch-up, promote, residual split, reserves, and clawback or true-up, what evidence supports it, and how the finance lead should communicate it to LPs, sponsors, fund administrators, counsel, tax advisors, and auditors.
How to Get Investors for Your Business: 8 Proven Methods That Work
8 real ways to get investors, ranked from easiest to hardest. With actual dollar amounts, timelines, and honest trade-offs for each method.
Advantages and Disadvantages of an IPO: The Honest Guide for Founders
IPOs unlock liquidity, public capital, and credibility — but they also mean quarterly earnings pressure, loss of privacy, and $5-15M in costs. Here's the honest breakdown, plus when an IPO actually makes sense.
Private Equity Fund Administration: How It Works and Top Providers
PE fund administration covers NAV calculations, waterfall distributions, K-1 prep, and regulatory filings. Here's what PE fund admins do, how they differ from VC fund admin, and the top providers to consider.
Cap Table Explained: Examples, Templates, and How to Build One
A cap table tracks who owns what in your startup. We walk through a real cap table example from founding through Series A — with templates, formulas, and dilution math.
Pre-Money vs Post-Money Valuation: What Founders Get Wrong
A $15M pre-money valuation isn't what you think it is. Option pools, stacked SAFEs, and the valuation trap catch first-time founders every time. Here's the math you actually need.
How to Structure a First-Time VC Fund: LP Terms, Economics, and Legal
Launching Fund I? Here's everything you need to know about entity structure, management fees, carry, GP commit, and why fund formation lawyers charge $100K+.
Carry Holdback Release Checklist
A practical checklist for sponsors and LP finance teams managing return of capital, preferred return, catch-up, promote, residual split, reserves, true-ups, and clawback controls.
Carry Reserve Policy Guide
A practical review guide for sponsors and LP finance teams managing return of capital, preferred return, catch-up, promote, residual split, reserves, true-ups, and clawback controls.
Clawback Exposure Review Checklist
A practical checklist for sponsors and LP finance teams managing return of capital, preferred return, catch-up, promote, residual split, reserves, true-ups, and clawback controls.
Deal-Level Waterfall Guide
A practical review guide for sponsors and LP finance teams managing return of capital, preferred return, catch-up, promote, residual split, reserves, true-ups, and clawback controls.
Investor Catch-Up is a metric in the waterfall and distribution economics workflow. It gives the sponsor, operator, or fund administrator a named control for the specific decision, evidence record, stakeholder expectation, and follow-up step behind the process.
Understanding Investor Catch-Up is critical for founders navigating the fundraising process. It directly impacts deal terms, valuation, and the relationship between founders and investors.
Investor Catch-Up falls under the waterfalls category in venture capital. This area covers concepts related to important concepts in venture capital.
Newsletter
Join thousands of founders and investors. Every Tuesday.
The VC Beast Brief
Join 5,000+ VC professionals
Weekly intelligence on fundraising, VC strategy, and the signals that matter. Every Tuesday, free.
Archstone
Run your fund like an institution.