Newest SaaS & Software Companies — 2026
Browse the newest privately-funded SaaS & Software companies. Sorted by filing date, with the most recent on top.
About SaaS & Software
SaaS & Software covers business software, developer tools, collaboration platforms, vertical SaaS for specific industries, open-source commercial companies, and general software infrastructure. This is one of the largest sectors by filing count in the corpus. Round sizes range from $1M–$5M seed-stage software rounds to $200M+ growth-stage SaaS raises. Delaware C-corporation structure dominates. Rule 506(b) is standard. The classifier excludes AI/ML companies (routed to AI & Machine Learning based on name-keyword matches) and fintech software (routed to Fintech based on industry classification). Investor bases are broad — multi-stage tech funds, vertical-specialist SaaS funds, revenue-based financing providers, and increasingly private-equity software buyers participating in late-stage rounds. This sector hub surfaces the most recent SaaS & Software Form D filings from SEC EDGAR, updated daily.
In 2026, SaaS & Software accounts for 346 catalogued filings totaling $7984.1M, running at roughly 72.9 filings per week over the last 30 days.
- Total raised
- $7984.1M
- Median offering
- $3.7M
- Active states
- 10
- Last 30 days
- 312
Featured SaaS & Software companies in 2026
Saronic Technologies, Inc.
Austin, TX · Filed Apr 9, 2026
Saronic Technologies, Inc. is a SaaS & Software company based in Austin, TX. The company is a Corporation, incorporated in Delaware, with it…
Hark Labs Inc.
SAN JOSE, CA · Filed Mar 24, 2026
Hark Labs Inc. is a SaaS & Software company based in SAN JOSE, CA. The company is a Corporation, incorporated in Delaware, with its office a…
Legora, Inc.
DOVER, DE · Filed Mar 24, 2026
Legora, Inc. is a SaaS & Software company based in DOVER, DE. The company is a Corporation, incorporated in Delaware, with its office at 111…
About SaaS & Software private companies
SaaS & Software is the anchor tech sector in US private capital because recurring revenue creates predictable unit economics that both debt and equity investors can underwrite. This shows up in Form D filings as a meaningful share of venture-debt-combined rounds, smaller bridge rounds with specific milestones, and late-stage growth rounds in $50M–$150M that would be PE-style in other sectors. Vertical SaaS — software purpose-built for specific industries such as construction, legal, healthcare-adjacent operations, and fintech-adjacent workflows — has displaced horizontal SaaS as the dominant filing category over the past decade. ARR-multiple valuations drove much of the 2020–2022 peak; post-reset, filings show more conservative round sizes. Founder-led serial entrepreneurs are common, visible in Form D executive sections across sequential companies.
AquiSense Inc.
Contractor Plus, Inc.
Darwin Investment Systems, Inc.
Deal Smart, Inc.
Decentralized Internet Technologies, Inc.
FOCUS UNIVERSAL INC.
Foundation Alloy Technology Explorations, Inc.
Kairos Water, Inc.
Lorica Security, Inc.
Matter Intelligence Inc.
Moodsonic Technologies Inc
Musen Sports, Corp.
NovaSolix, Inc.
orgn.dev Inc
RAI Partners Inc.
RAY ALLEN, INC.
Symmatrics, Inc.
Zapata Quantum, Inc.
Aria Networks, Inc.
Autonomous Cyber, Inc.
BFREE Africa Inc.
CargoSense, Inc.
DeepX Elysium Inc.
G2Mint, Inc.
Loki Robotics, Inc.
MGT CAPITAL INVESTMENTS, INC.
Nivalon Medical Technologies Inc.
PHIN SECURITY, INC.
QnA Cloud Holdings LLC
Real Vault, Inc.
SATO Technologies Corp.
ScrubSync, Inc.
Siftwell Analytics, Inc.
Slips Technologies, Inc.
Tava Health, Inc.
Vataseason Ventures Fund LLC
Alliance Tower Fund-V.1, LP
Arrakis Corp
BCI Innovations LLC
DEBIT MY DATA, INC.
Digital Intelligence Robotics Ltd
Equipmate, Inc
Fraun Inc.
Hamiz, Inc
Malcolm Inc.
Orthios Innovations LLC
Sanctuary Cognitive Systems Corp
SaaS & Software funding trends
Recent SaaS & Software filings reveal several themes. First, developer-tools SaaS (observability, CI/CD, code-generation-adjacent) attracts steady mid-stage rounds, though compressed versus 2021 peaks. Second, vertical SaaS for fragmented industries (construction, logistics, legal, healthcare support functions) sees large filings with strategic industry-investor participation. Third, product-led-growth companies file smaller more-frequent rounds reflecting their bottom-up sales motion and shorter runway-to-traction cycles. Fourth, open-source commercial companies file rounds with investor composition skewed toward OSS-specialist funds, though license-model details don't surface on Form D directly. Fifth, vertical-AI-SaaS convergence is driving classifier ambiguity; some filings may arguably belong in AI & Machine Learning, and researchers doing systematic analysis should cross-check both hubs.