The all-in-one invoicing and payments platform, Agree.com raises $7.2M seed round led by Tyler Hogge at Pelion Venture Partners, with significant participation from Blank Ventures and notable angel investor Gokul Rajaram.
The funding follows a $3 million pre-seed round led by Sheel Mohnot at Better Tomorrow Ventures (BTV), with continued participation from existing investors including BTV, 8-Bit Capital, Sophia Amoruso’s Trust Fund, Hustle Fund, Everywhere Ventures, Singh Capital Partners, and Firsthand VC.
With a team of veteran fintech founders, Agree is redefining e-signature — what was once just a digital handshake is now a true fintech product. Unlike legacy e-signature players, Agree is the first platform to integrate payments directly into the signing process, eliminating friction and accelerating transactions from contract to cash.
For years, e-signature has been dominated by slow-moving, bloated companies that prioritize legacy systems over customer experience. As a result, businesses have been forced to navigate outdated, disjointed workflows where signing a contract and processing a payment are entirely separate steps. Agree is entering its next phase of growth to change that. After scaling from 0 to 30,000 users in six months, Agree is rapidly adding customers beyond founders and entrepreneurs to serve mid-market and enterprise teams.
At the end of every deal is a transaction. Agree ensures it happens instantly.
Agree launched less than a year ago with the goal of modernizing the contract-to-payment process, and its growth has been explosive. The company onboarded 1,000 users in its first 30 days, reached 10,000 users within three months, and surpassed 30,000 users within six months. It was voted as Product Hunt’s Product of the Month in November.
Agree’s business model disrupts the industry by commoditizing e-signature — offering it for free — and instead monetizing invoicing and billing logic. “They’re solving a huge pain point for us, our portfolio companies, and just about any business that moves the majority of its revenue through contracts. We believe that everything is fintech, including e-signature,” said Sheel Mohnot of Better Tomorrow Ventures.
With this new capital, Agree will expand its engineering team and continue investing in growth and product development, focusing on:
More robust accounts receivable automation
Enhanced multiplayer functionality
Expanded AI-powered workflows
Deeper integrations with accounting and CRM software
“What Divvy did for accounts payable, Agree is doing for accounts receivable. While at Bill.com, I saw firsthand the enormous opportunity ahead for streamlining AR automation,” said lead investor Tyler Hogge, who previously led Product at Divvy before its $2.5 billion acquisition by Bill.com.
CEO Marty Ringlein attributes the company’s rapid success to AI. “With a team of only seven leveraging the latest AI tools, we’re able to compete head-to-head with DocuSign’s 7,000 employees to deliver a better, faster, and cheaper experience. The next version of DocuSign won’t look anything like DocuSign.