The SAFE โ Simple Agreement for Future Equity โ was introduced by Y Combinator in 2013 as a founder-friendly alternative to convertible notes. The pitch was speed, simplicity, and a fairer split of negotiating power. A decade later, SAFEs have become the dominant early-stage instrument, and most founders who sign them treat the YC template as a neutral standard. It isn’t. The current “post-money” SAFE introduced in 2018 quietly shifts substantial economic risk onto founders, and the founder community has largely failed to notice.
Pre-money vs. post-money: the quiet rewrite
The original SAFE was pre-money โ investor ownership was calculated against the company’s value before the conversion event. Under that structure, if a founder raised more money later under more SAFEs, the dilution was shared between earlier SAFE investors and founders. The 2018 post-money SAFE flipped this. Now, SAFE investors lock in their ownership percentage at the time of conversion, regardless of how much additional SAFE money the founder raises. Every additional dollar raised on subsequent SAFEs dilutes founders 100% โ earlier investors are protected. This is a significant change presented as a clarification, and most founders signing SAFEs today don’t fully understand the difference.
The valuation cap is doing more work than founders think
The valuation cap in a SAFE sets a ceiling on the price at which the SAFE converts. In practice, it functions as a price negotiation that founders often treat too casually. A $5M cap on a $500K raise means the investor owns 10% โ but that’s only true if the next round prices at or above $5M. If the next round prices below the cap, the investor still gets 10%, but founders have lost optionality on every subsequent SAFE round. Multiple SAFEs at different caps stack in ways that are hard to model intuitively. Many founders discover at priced-round time that their cap table is far more diluted than they assumed.
“Standard terms” quietly include investor-favorable provisions
Pro rata rights, MFN (most favored nation) clauses, side letters, and information rights frequently slip into SAFE rounds without explicit founder negotiation. Each is reasonable in isolation; in aggregate they constrain how founders can raise future rounds and obligate ongoing reporting. Sophisticated investors negotiate these intentionally; less sophisticated founders sign without modification. The asymmetry of expertise between repeat-investor and first-time founder is enormous, and the “standard template” framing flattens that asymmetry into a false sense of fairness.
What founder-friendly SAFE practice actually looks like
Use a pre-money SAFE if you can negotiate it, especially if you anticipate raising multiple SAFE rounds before pricing. Model dilution rigorously across plausible future rounds before signing. Get independent counsel โ not the investor’s lawyer’s referral. Push back on pro rata and MFN if they don’t reflect the size of the check. And don’t accept “this is the standard YC SAFE” as a closing argument. Standards reflect whoever drafted them.
The bottom line
SAFEs are useful, and the YC template solves real problems. But “founder-friendly” is marketing language for an instrument that’s been quietly tuned toward investor interests over the past decade. Founders who treat it as neutral are negotiating from a weaker position than they realize.
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