What’s the optimal age to found a tech company? Do you need to be a 19-year-old college dropout like Zuckerberg? Or is it better to have decades of industry experience under your belt?
According to the data, the sweet spot is somewhat in between. We analyzed 2,602 tech sector customers using Pave’s compensation tools. Let’s take a look at some founder age benchmarks from this dataset.
The median founder of a venture-backed tech company founded their company when they were ~31-33 years old. Note that on the lower side, the 25th percentile at time of founding is ~27-28 years old. And on the higher side, the 75th percentile is ~36-38 years old.
Founders still running their companies today range from a median of 37 years old at seed stage ($0 to 5M capital raised) to 43 years old at later stage companies who have raised at least $500M.
Interestingly, founder age at incorporation does not have a clear-cut impact on how much capital the company has raised to date. In other words, the mature tech companies in the wild today are not disproportionately dominated by founders who were older and wiser when their companies were formed.
No matter your age, it’s never too early—or too late—to start building your vision.
View cash and equity benchmarks from 7,500+ companies with Pave's free Market Data product.