For Subscribers

The Truth About Bridge Loans Need a loan? Ask your investors.

By Sam Hogg

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

"We'll likely need a bridge." That's one of the most dreaded phrases we can hear from the CEOs of companies we invest in.

Bridge financing, put simply, is an IOU backed by the promise of raising more money in the future. When it happens, you'll inevitably witness some VC gallows humor, as one obnoxious person in the room asks, "Is this a bridge or a plank?" It never fails.

The truth is that bridge notes are used all the time. Perhaps the next round of money from new investors didn't arrive as quickly as projected. Maybe sales are down. The list goes on and on as to possible reasons behind the request.

For companies that are crushing it, bridge financing can be employed to extend a runway past a significant valuation point so that existing investors can capture that new value for themselves. But more often than not, bridge notes are used to extend the life of a struggling startup whose future is unknown. In either case, savvy entrepreneurs should know what they are and how they work.

Most bridge notes take the form of convertible debt. That is, VCs expect to be paid back not with dollars, but with conversion to company stock upon maturity. Well-understood loan elements like principal and interest apply to this conversion, but bridge notes also include other "equity kickers" like valuation caps, discounts and warrants.

Valuation caps protect investors from unrecognized gains in company value during the bridging period that would otherwise shrink their ownership. For example, a $1 million bridge loan with a $5 million cap would guarantee the lender at least 20 percent of the company prior to the additional financing.

A discount is just that—a discounted price on shares in the future round of financing. If the aforementioned transaction were accompanied by a 20 percent discount, the lender would be entitled to $1.25 million in shares in the future financing round for the bargain price of the $1 million loan.

Like an option, a warrant is the right to purchase shares at a set price in the future. Back to our sample transaction: A $1 million bridge loan with 20 percent warrant coverage would entitle the lender to buy $200,000 worth of stock at the next round's prices well into the future. The lender may never exercise this right, but it could become massively beneficial if the company experiences skyrocketing growth.

It would be easy to say that bridge loans are only risky investments made defensively against the threat of failure, but that simply isn't true anymore. In fact, they've become a fairly standard financing move, even used as the first infusion of capital raised by a startup. The appeal? It's much easier for entrepreneurs to negotiate the terms of a bridge note than to determine the value of their startup and how much an investor's equity stake will be. That's good news, since a bridge could help business owners cross over to sustainability when there may not be another deal in sight.

Sam Hogg

Entrepreneur Contributor

Sam Hogg is a venture partner with Open Prairie Ventures, a Midwest-based venture-capital fund investing in agriculture, life-science and information technology.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Growing a Business

Still Chasing Quick Wins? Here's How That Mindset Is Stopping You From Scaling Your Business

Long-term success comes from refining the engine, not chasing the outcome.

Health & Wellness

I Tried Stardust and Scorpion Venom to Heal My Inflammation — Here's What Happened

When I gave my TEDx talk on inflammation, I wasn't speaking as a scientist. I was speaking as someone who had lived through it.

Business News

'The Hope Is That You Will Eventually Quit': Experts Reveal the Signs That You Are Being Quietly Fired

Are you a target of this passive-aggressive management tactic? Here are the signs.

Employee Experience & Recruiting

How to Ignite Commitment and Retain Top Talent in Today's Modern Workplace

Join us for this free webinar and learn the essential factors that drive employees to join, stay, and thrive at work.

Business News

'Internet Culture Is Changing the English Language': Gen Alpha Gibberish 'Skibidi' Added to the Cambridge Dictionary Online

Gen Z terms "tradwife" and "delulu" also made the cut (though they haven't made it past basic spell check yet).