Newest Businesses in South Carolina

Browse newly-funded private companies headquartered in South Carolina. Sorted by filing date, with the most recent on top.

About South Carolina

South Carolina's Form D filings cluster in Charleston, Greenville-Spartanburg, and Columbia. Charleston's growth as a lifestyle-tech and logistics hub (anchored by the Port of Charleston) drives SaaS, logistics, and consumer-brand filings. Greenville-Spartanburg's advanced-manufacturing cluster (BMW, Michelin, Milliken) produces manufacturing-tech filings. Round sizes typically range $2M–$25M. Delaware incorporation dominates; South Carolina LLCs appear for real-estate and industrial vehicles.

In 2026, South Carolina accounts for 18 catalogued filings totaling $35.6M, running at roughly 4.0 filings per week over the last 30 days.

Total raised
$35.6M
Median offering
$9.1M
Active cities
5
Last 30 days
17

Top cities

Featured South Carolina companies in 2026

About private capital in South Carolina

South Carolina has competitive corporate tax rates and a business-friendly regulatory environment. Charleston's port and growing tech ecosystem drive logistics and SaaS filings. Greenville-Spartanburg's advanced-manufacturing cluster (anchored by BMW's US plant and tier-1 suppliers) produces specialized filings. The state's aerospace base (Boeing Charleston) contributes aerospace-adjacent filings. Real-estate vehicles target SC multifamily, industrial, and coastal property.

South Carolina funding trends

Recent South Carolina Form D filings show several patterns. First, Charleston SaaS and logistics-tech filings reflect the city's growing tech ecosystem. Second, Greenville-Spartanburg advanced-manufacturing and auto-supplier filings appear regularly. Third, aerospace filings tie to Boeing Charleston. Fourth, real-estate vehicles target SC multifamily and industrial assets, plus coastal hospitality. South Carolina's filing volume has grown steadily.