
- Cash switch firm Paysend has raised $65 million in funding. The spherical featured a strategic funding from companion Mastercard.
- The funding provides to Paysend’s $125 million Sequence B spherical, which closed in 2021.
- Paysend made its Finovate debut at FinovateEurope in London in 2016.
Worldwide cash switch firm Paysend has secured $65 million in funding. The spherical included a strategic funding from Mastercard, which introduced a partnership with Paysend earlier this yr. That alliance helped improve cross-border funds for SMEs by the use of its Open Funds Community (OPN).
Present buyers Infravia Progress Capital, One Peak, and Hermes GPE Innovation Fund additionally participated within the spherical. This week’s funding follows the corporate’s $125 million Sequence B spherical, which closed in 2021.
A Finovate alum since its debut at FinovateEurope in London in 2016, Paysend offers fund transfers to greater than 170 nations. The corporate’s platform ensures transparency by displaying forex charges, switch charges, and the receivable quantity earlier than every switch. Paysend customers could make transfers through financial institution playing cards, accounts, and even cellular numbers. Cash transfers are licensed by Visa, Mastercard, China UnionPay, and are PCI DSS licensed, as nicely.
“This important funding is a testomony to the energy of Paysend’s imaginative and prescient,” Paysend CEO and co-founder Ronnie Millar stated, “to construct the best-in-class cross border options for companies and shoppers, earning money switch easy for everybody.”
Paysend’s funding information comes simply days after the corporate introduced a partnership with CalQRisk. The corporate presents a governance, danger administration, and compliance (GRC) resolution that Paysend will use to reinforce its present danger administration processes. In October, Paysend teamed up with fellow Finovate alum Western Union. This partnership supplied Western Union clients with a brand new direct to card payout choice.
Paysend is headquartered in London, U.Okay. The corporate entered the Israeli market this summer time after partnering with Israel-based fintech Okoora.
Photograph by Luis Quintero