Angel investors fund companies that are too early for venture capital and too ambitious for friends-and-family rounds. They are typically writing cheques between £10,000 and £250,000 from their own money, which means their decision-making process is more personal and less institutional than a VC fund’s.
That difference matters enormously for how you approach the raise. Understanding what angels are actually optimising for, and how the 2026 fundraising environment has shifted since the 2021 peak, determines how you present your company and which conversations are worth having.
What Angel Investors Are Actually Looking For
Angels invest in people first. They cannot run the detailed due diligence that VC funds conduct; they are often investing in companies with minimal revenue or traction where financial models are largely speculative. What they can assess in an early conversation is whether the founder understands the market deeply, has a credible plan for the near term, and is someone they want to work with over the next three to five years.
The second thing angels evaluate is the market. Is the problem worth solving? Is the market large enough that a successful outcome produces meaningful returns? Angels who write £50,000 cheques need several hundred times returns on their best investments to make the portfolio economics work, which means they need to believe a startup has a real path to being worth significantly more than it is today.
The third, and least discussed, factor is portfolio fit. Active angels typically have thesis areas, sectors or problem domains they know well from operating experience. A pitch that lands in an angel’s domain of deep expertise is more likely to get a quick decision and meaningful support post-investment than one that is technically interesting but outside their knowledge.
The 2026 Angel Market: What Has Changed
| Factor | 2021 Peak | 2026 Reality |
|---|---|---|
| Valuations | High, driven by FOMO and low interest rates | More conservative, revenue-evidence valued |
| Decision speed | Fast, competitive to get in deals | Slower, more thorough evaluation |
| Round structure | SAFEs at high caps very common | Mix of SAFEs, convertible notes, priced rounds |
| Sector focus | Broad enthusiasm across sectors | AI-native products attract most enthusiasm |
| Due diligence depth | Light in hot market | Heavier, more financial and reference scrutiny |
Finding Angels Worth Talking To
The least effective approach is cold outreach through LinkedIn. Angel investing is relationship-driven; a message from someone with no mutual connection ranks very low on the priority list of busy investors. The best introductions come from other founders, from accelerator programmes, from advisers who know the angel community, and from other angels who have backed related companies.
Angel networks and syndicates, including AngelList, Seedrs, Crowdcube (for equity crowdfunding), and the UK Business Angel Association network, provide structured access to pooled angel capital. Syndicate leads, experienced angels who put their own money in and bring co-investors behind them, can close rounds faster than assembling individual angel commitments one at a time.
Accelerator programmes, including Y Combinator, Seedcamp, Antler, and sector-specific accelerators, combine a small cheque with access to a network of alumni angels who are specifically looking for companies at the stage you are at. The network access often outweighs the financial terms.
What to Prepare Before Your First Conversation
The Pitch Deck
A first angel pitch deck covers: the problem you are solving and for whom, the scale of the market, your solution and why it works, the traction or early evidence you have, the team and why you specifically are the right people to solve this problem, and how much you are raising and what you will do with it.
Twelve to fifteen slides is the right length. Anything longer signals that you have not yet identified what is most important about your company. The deck’s job is to get the meeting, not to close the investment.
The Financial Model
Angels at pre-revenue or early-revenue stages know your financial model is speculative. What they are assessing is whether you understand your unit economics, have a realistic view of how the business scales, and can defend your assumptions with logic rather than optimism.
Build a three-year model that shows revenue by cohort, costs by category, and the point at which the company reaches breakeven or requires additional capital. Be able to explain each major assumption and describe what happens to the model if the two or three most sensitive assumptions are wrong.
The Cap Table
Angels want to know who already owns what. A cap table with significant founder equity diluted early by advisers who contributed little, or with debt instruments that would create complications at the next round, raises questions you do not want to spend your first conversation answering. Clean up any cap table issues before beginning to fundraise.
Negotiating Term Sheets
Most angel rounds in 2026 use either a SAFE (Simple Agreement for Future Equity) or a convertible note. Both delay setting a company valuation until a future priced round. SAFEs are simpler, have no interest rate, and do not create debt. Convertible notes carry interest and a maturity date, creating legal obligations that SAFEs do not.
The key economic terms to understand are the valuation cap (the maximum valuation at which the angel’s investment converts to equity) and the discount (the percentage reduction on the next round price that angels receive). A SAFE with a £3 million cap converts to equity at £3 million even if the next priced round values the company at £8 million.
Pro-rata rights give angels the right to participate in future rounds to maintain their percentage ownership. For angels who write their initial cheque expecting to follow on, pro-rata rights are important. For founders, granting pro-rata rights to all angels can create complications in later rounds. Negotiate selectively.
What First-Time Founders Consistently Get Wrong
Raising from the wrong angels. An angel who is enthusiastic but has no relevant network, no sector knowledge, and no operational experience to draw on is a cheque with limited value beyond the money. The best angels make introductions, provide specific advice based on having built similar companies, and are honest when things are not going well.
Treating the fundraise as an event rather than a process. The best time to start building relationships with angels is six months before you plan to raise, not six days before you run out of runway. By the time you need the money urgently, it is too late to build the relationships that produce the best terms and the best investors.
Not asking for referrals. An angel who passes on your deal because it is not in their thesis, or because the timing is wrong, often knows other angels who would be a better fit. Most founders do not ask for the referral because a no feels like the end of the conversation. It rarely needs to be.
FAQs
How much equity should I give up in an angel round?
Most angel rounds result in 10 to 20% dilution for the founders, depending on the amount raised and the implied valuation. Giving up more than 25% in an angel round creates downstream problems for Series A valuation and founder motivation. Giving up less than 10% for a meaningful capital amount typically requires a pre-money valuation that angels will scrutinise carefully.
Should I run a lead investor process or approach angels individually?
Finding one lead investor who sets the terms and brings others behind them is more efficient than assembling a round from individual angels independently. It also provides social proof: if a well-regarded angel has already committed, subsequent angels can follow with less independent diligence. The challenge is that lead investors expect more diligence and often want a board seat or observer rights.
How long does an angel round typically take?
In the current market, 3 to 6 months from first conversations to close is typical for a first angel round. The fastest rounds close in 6 to 8 weeks when there is clear traction, a warm network, and a focused raise process. Rounds that drag beyond 9 months typically have a signal problem that the founder needs to address before continuing.
After the Round Closes
The relationship with your angels does not end at signing. Active angels who are well-treated, kept informed with a monthly update email, consulted on decisions in their domain of expertise, and given visibility into the company’s trajectory provide ongoing value that far exceeds their financial contribution.
The update email is the most underrated investor relations tool available to early-stage founders. A concise monthly email covering progress on three key metrics, a specific challenge you are working through, and one thing where you would welcome the angel’s help takes 30 minutes to write and generates introductions, advice, and goodwill that compounds over years.
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