The Bridge Round Decision Tree
Round Ready Academy — Lesson 7 of 11
A bridge is one of the highest-stakes decisions a founder makes. Get the structure right and you preserve optionality for the next priced round. Get it wrong and you spend the next eighteen months apologising for it.
This lesson is the decision tree: when a bridge is the right answer, when it is not, what the alternatives look like, and how to position a bridge thesis without the market reading it as distress. Writing is grounded in what Opagio has seen across the bridge decisions founders have brought us in the last eighteen months.
A bridge is not a substitute for a priced round. It is a structured instrument designed to carry the business over a specific, defensible milestone — with terms that anticipate, rather than delay, the next priced round. Bridges that are used as "raising without pricing" tend to create larger problems than they solve.
Step 1 — What Is the Bridge Actually For?
Before any structure question, the first test is whether a bridge is the right answer. The honest question is: what specific, measurable milestone will the bridge capital carry you to, and how does hitting that milestone change the price of the next round?
Good bridge theses pass this test in one sentence:
- "The bridge funds the product release that takes us from £1.8M to £3.0M ARR, at which point our NRR cohort crosses 120% and supports a Series B at a materially higher pre-money."
- "The bridge funds the two regulatory approvals that unlock the enterprise segment, extending our SOM by 4x and changing our comparable set."
- "The bridge funds the three enterprise logos already in procurement, whose landing changes our concentration story and our Series B multiple."
Bridges that fail this test are often dressed-up versions of "we need another twelve months":
- "The bridge gives us more time to find product-market fit."
- "The bridge buys runway while we work out the next round."
- "The bridge smooths a slow patch."
These are rarely bridges; they are delayed down-rounds. The distinction matters because bridge pricing, bridge terms, and bridge signalling all depend on whether there is a specific, measurable milestone at the end of the capital.
Step 2 — Bridge, Extension, Venture Debt, or Equity?
Once you have a defensible bridge thesis, the instrument question becomes straightforward. Four main instruments are available; the choice depends on the thesis, the cash need, and the existing cap table.
Four Instruments, Four Use Cases
| Instrument | Typical structure | When it fits | When it does not |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge (SAFE or convertible note) | 12-24 month maturity, discount to next round (typically 15-25%), optional valuation cap | Clear milestone, clear next round, existing investors supportive | No visible path to a priced round |
| Extension (priced) | New share class at priced valuation, typically flat or modest uplift from last round | Existing round was under-raised relative to progress, new lead available | Existing cap table would be materially impaired |
| Venture debt | Senior secured debt, 2-4 year term, warrant coverage 5-15% | Predictable cash flows, hard asset or ARR collateral, mature operations | Early-stage, choppy revenue, no collateral or ARR stability |
| Equity (new priced round) | New lead, priced round, standard preferred terms | Round supports a priced outcome; market environment supports the story | Underlying business is not yet priceable — needs the bridge milestone first |
The tree runs in roughly this order: if a priced round is achievable at acceptable terms, do the priced round. If a priced round is not achievable but a measurable milestone is within reach, a bridge or extension is appropriate. If the cash need is modest and the ARR is mature and predictable, venture debt can sit alongside either.
Most founders over-index on SAFE-based bridges because they are easy to close. The easy route is not always the right route.
Step 3 — Structuring the Bridge Without Creating a Worse Problem
A bridge that creates a larger problem than it solves typically does one of three things:
- Prices the next round implicitly by capping it too low. A £14M cap on a bridge written when the business is already worth £12M turns the next "Series A at £30M pre-money" conversation into a structural fight with existing holders.
- Layers preferences that turn the next round into a waterfall negotiation. Liquidation preferences, participating preferences, and anti-dilution rights on bridge notes accumulate. A clean next round is much harder to write around them.
- Signals distress through size or sourcing. A £400K SAFE at the existing cap, led by a new small angel, reads as emergency capital. A £1.5M bridge led by existing investors and framed as milestone capital reads very differently.
The single most important discipline in bridge structuring is to anticipate the next priced round rather than delay it. Every term that makes the next priced round harder to write is a term that reduces your optionality. The opposite — every term that makes the next round easier — tends to cost a little more today and save a great deal later.
Step 4 — Positioning the Thesis Without Signalling Distress
Bridge signalling is a market problem. The market reads the structure, the size, the sourcing, and the messaging. Three rules tend to produce bridge rounds that are read as strategic rather than distressed.
1. Lead with the milestone, not the runway
"We are raising a £1.5M bridge to fund the two enterprise logos already in procurement and the product release that takes NRR from 108% to 122% across top-2 segments" is strategic capital. "We are raising a £1.5M bridge to give us more runway" is distressed capital. Same money, different read.
2. Size to the milestone
A bridge that exactly funds the milestone plus a modest buffer reads confident. A bridge that triples the prior runway reads like the milestone is an excuse. Institutional investors read this pattern very quickly.
3. Lead with existing investors
A bridge that is first written by the existing cap table and then optionally opened to a new participant reads supportive. A bridge that is first written by a new outsider reads as existing investors declining to follow — which is a bearish signal regardless of context.
Founders sometimes worry that leading with existing investors creates a signalling problem if existing investors do not participate. The reverse is true: existing investors who decline to participate in a bridge produce a much louder signal than they intend. The diligence-ready move is to have that conversation with existing investors first, before the broader market knows you are raising a bridge.
Step 5 — The Milestone Has to Be Monitorable
A bridge without a monitorable milestone becomes a perpetual bridge. The milestones that work are specific, time-bound, and independently verifiable.
Milestone Quality — Good, Adequate, Weak
| Quality | Example |
|---|---|
| Strong | "Close three named enterprise customers at £180K+ ACV each, integrated and producing at least £30K ARR each by Q3" |
| Adequate | "Reach £3.0M ARR with 120%+ NRR in top-2 segments by end of Q4" |
| Weak | "Improve commercial metrics over the next 12 months" |
Milestones that a partner can track in a quarterly update are milestones the market can trust. Milestones that resolve into a single commercial narrative ("the three logos landed, NRR hit 122%, ARR passed £3M") make the next priced round materially easier.
Common Bridge Structuring Mistakes
Three mistakes recur in bridge structuring that are worth flagging explicitly, because they compound.
The first is setting the valuation cap too low. A cap priced off today's momentum penalises you when the milestone is hit, because the bridge-holders convert in at a cap that no longer reflects where the business has moved to. A slightly higher cap today often costs less than the structural compression a low cap creates at the next round.
The second is allowing participating preferred or multiple-x liquidation preferences onto the bridge. These are acceptable in priced rounds where price reflects the term; on a bridge, they tend to accumulate silently and to show up as a waterfall problem at the next priced round.
The third is pricing the discount too generously. A 30% discount to the next round sounds like founder-friendly language; it produces a bridge that converts in at a price that materially damages the next round's cap table maths. Standard 15-25% discounts are there for a reason.
Step 6 — What the Bridge Decision Looks Like Across the Opagio 12
A common founder mistake is to treat the bridge decision as purely financial. It is not. The bridge affects every Opagio 12 driver:
- Customer Capital — the milestone should materially strengthen retention or concentration, not merely extend runway
- Organisational Capital — the team you hire with bridge capital has to work without the founder being the only senior seller
- Human Capital — the bridge decision tests the founding team's resilience under narrower options
- Culture — the messaging inside the company matters; a bridge communicated as a milestone round strengthens culture, while a bridge communicated as emergency capital weakens it
The bridge, done well, is a test of whether the asset base you have built holds up under narrower commercial conditions. Done badly, it reveals gaps you would have preferred not to discover.
Starter Gives You the Decision-Tree Summary — Growth Gives You the Thesis Document
The Starter tier includes the Bridge-versus-Equity decision-tree summary, which is the tool most founders need to frame the decision with their board and existing investors.
For founders running a live bridge conversation with a lead committed and terms to draft, the Growth tier unlocks the full Bridge Thesis Builder — the institutional-grade thesis document that sits alongside the term sheet.
Primary CTA: Starter (£499) — Bridge vs Equity decision-tree summary. Upgrade to Growth (£1,499) for the full Bridge Thesis Builder — the institutional-grade thesis document.
For the broader fundraising context, see Dilution mechanics and the Intangible Finance programme. To continue this course, go to Lesson 8: When the offer comes in 40% below comps.
Ivan Gowan is Founder and CEO of Opagio. Twenty-five years across financial services and regulated fintech, including multiple bridge and priced rounds as founder and operator. Meet the team.