
Founder dilution is the reduction in a founder’s ownership percentage when the company issues new shares. At formation, founders often own 100% of the equity between them; each time the startup raises money, expands the option pool, or convertsSAFEs/notes, total shares increase, so each founder’s slice of the pie gets smaller even if their absolute share count stays the same. This is why a founder who starts at, say, 70% can find themselves at 30% or less by the time the company reaches later-stage rounds.
How Founder Dilution Happens
Founder dilution generally comes from a few repeat events:
- Fundraising rounds. New shares are sold to investors in Seed, Series A, B, C, etc., increasing the total share count and reducing existing holders’ percentages.
- Option pools and employee equity. Creating or expanding an option pool (for employees, advisors, and executives) dilutes founders as those options are counted in the fully diluted cap table.
- Convertible notes and SAFEs. When convertibles turn into equity at a priced round, they add more shares, further diluting founders’ ownership.
Each of these steps may only dilute founders by 10–25%, but across multiple rounds, the cumulative effect can be significant, especially if early rounds are highly dilutive.
An Example of Dilution
Here’s a simple, concrete example of founder dilution using numbers and percentages.
- At formation, the founder owns all 1,000,000 shares of a company.
- Founder shares: 1,000,000
- Total shares: 1,000,000
- Founder ownership:
- 1,000,000/1,000,000 = 100%
- 1,000,000/1,000,000 = 100%
Now the company raises a seed round and issues new shares to an investor.
- New investor shares issued: 250,000
- New total shares after the round:
- 1,000,000 (founder) + 250,000 (investor) = 1,250,000
Ownership after the round:
- Founder ownership:
- Shares: 1,000,000
- Percentage: 1,000,000/1,250,000 = 80%
- Investor ownership:
- Shares: 250,000
- Percentage: 250,000/1,250,000 = 20%
The founder’s share count didn’t change (still 1,000,000), but their percentage went from 100% to 80%. That 20 percentage point drop is the dilution from issuing new shares to the investor.
Why Dilution Isn’t Always Bad
Dilution sounds negative, but it’s often the price of building a larger, more valuable company:
- Raising capital lets you hire, build your product, and grow faster. If valuation rises more than dilution, founders can end up owning a smaller percentage of a much bigger pie.
- Granting equity helps attract and retain strong employees, increasing the odds the startup reaches a valuable exit.
Investors also expect founders to be meaningfully invested. Too much early dilution can worry later-stage investors if founders look “washed out” and under-incentivized.
Managing Founder Dilution Strategically
Founders can’t avoid dilution, but they can manage it:
- Raise only what you need at each stage to hit the next major milestones, rather than over-raising at low valuations.
- Negotiate realistic valuations and option pool sizes so early rounds are not more dilutive than necessary.
- Understand your fully diluted cap table before and after each round, including option pool increases and convertible conversions.
Founders need to keep a close eye on dilution, model different financing scenarios, and make informed decisions about how each round affects their long-term ownership and control.
