Newest Services Companies — 2026

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

About Services

Services is the catch-all sector in this directory for operating companies that don't fit cleanly into the 15 other classifications. It includes business-services firms, professional-services platforms, specialized-consultancy businesses, and — most importantly for this corpus — the vast majority of pooled-investment-fund filings: private-equity feeder funds, SPV vehicles, fund-of-funds structures, family-office co-investment vehicles. These fund-vehicle filings were previously misclassified as Fintech in earlier versions of the directory; the current classifier correctly groups them under Services because they are capital-management vehicles, not operating fintech products. Round sizes range from $100K small-LLC vehicles to $500M+ fund raises. Delaware LLC structure dominates. Rule 506(b) is standard with occasional 506(c).

In 2026, Services accounts for 3,969 catalogued filings totaling $246691.2M, running at roughly 857.7 filings per week over the last 30 days.

Total raised
$246691.2M
Median offering
$1.6M
Active states
10
Last 30 days
3671

Featured Services companies in 2026

About Services private companies

The Services sector is the largest bucket in the directory primarily because of pooled-investment-fund vehicles. Nearly every private-equity, venture-capital, hedge-fund, or family-office vehicle raising from US accredited investors files a Form D, and nearly all of these are classified in the SEC's Pooled Investment Fund industry group — which this directory maps to Services. These filings include fund-level raises (the fund itself) and SPV/feeder-level raises (investor-specific co-investment vehicles). Common legal structures include Delaware LLCs in series form, Cayman Islands entities for offshore LP bases, and Irish or Luxembourg vehicles for European investors. Executive sections commonly list fund administrators (Sydecar, Assure, AngelList-affiliated entities) as related persons, often with legal-entity-name artifacts that the directory corrects where possible.

Services funding trends

Recent Services Form D filings show the structural patterns of private-fund capital formation. First, SPV and co-investment vehicles continue to proliferate — small LLCs filing $500K–$10M offerings, often with administrator names like Sydecar or Assure listed as the director. Second, larger institutional fund raises ($100M–$500M) from established venture and growth-equity managers file with defined investor-count ranges and strategic-LP composition. Third, secondaries-focused funds have grown as a distinct filing cluster, reflecting the expanded secondary market for VC/PE fund interests. Fourth, evergreen and interval-fund structures have emerged for retail-access private-credit and real-estate strategies. Fifth, non-fund professional-services businesses (traditional consulting, business-process outsourcing operating companies) file far less frequently and tend toward smaller rounds.