Newest Other Companies — 2026

Browse the newest privately-funded Other companies. Sorted by filing date, with the most recent on top.

About Other

Other is the residual sector for Form D filings where the SEC's industryGroupType is ambiguous or undeclared, and where the company name doesn't match any of the 15 named-sector heuristics. Most filings in this bucket are small LLCs with limited disclosure — single-purpose entities, project-specific vehicles, or newly-formed companies that haven't yet declared a clear industry focus. Round sizes skew small, usually under $5M. Delaware LLCs dominate. Rule 506(b) is standard. This sector hub exists mostly as a completeness fallback; most users browsing for specific investment categories will find relevant filings under one of the named sectors rather than here. This sector hub lists the most recent Other Form D filings from SEC EDGAR, updated daily.

In 2026, Other accounts for 833 catalogued filings totaling $21541.9M, running at roughly 179.7 filings per week over the last 30 days.

Total raised
$21541.9M
Median offering
$4.8M
Active states
10
Last 30 days
769

Featured Other companies in 2026

About Other private companies

The Other sector captures the residue of the classifier's best-effort industry mapping. Three patterns are typical. First, generic LLC SPVs with minimal identifying information — holding companies, project vehicles, or acquisition entities that don't declare an operating industry. Second, genuinely difficult-to-classify operating companies with interdisciplinary products or very-early-stage positioning where the business model hasn't yet crystallized into a recognizable category. Third, SEC filings where the industryGroupType field is simply Other and the company name doesn't provide enough classification signal for the heuristics to route. Filings here should be viewed as raw data rather than a curated investment category. Researchers using this hub for systematic corpus study can treat these as edge cases requiring individual review.

Other funding trends

Recent Other Form D filings show the typical mix. First, anonymous holding-company LLCs file regularly with generic names (Patron Ventures, Investment Holdings, SPV II) — these often represent single-purpose acquisition or investment vehicles where the underlying strategy isn't declared on Form D. Second, genuine cross-category operating companies appear occasionally — companies spanning multiple verticals or pursuing ambiguous industry positions. Third, administrative or legal-purpose entities (blocker entities, feeder vehicles, tax-efficiency structures) file with minimal disclosure. Fourth, unclassified earliest-stage companies appear before they've declared a sector focus. Users interested in specific investment categories are typically better served by the named sector hubs; Other functions as a completeness catch-all rather than a curated category.