OwnHome, a fintech startup that wants to turn renters into property owners, has raised $31 million in a Series A.
The round was led by VC firm Square Peg with existing backers including the Commonwealth Bank’s VC arm X15, GFC, Entrée Capital, AfterWork, and Possible Ventures doubling down on the startup.
The cash injection is earmarked towards the customer platform and growing OwnHome’s property portfolio.
OwnHome targets first-home buyers currently renting, who can afford regular monthly payments, and hoping to overcome the deposit hurdle in a hot property market.
It gives approved potential buyers the ability to move into a own home without a deposit, instead paying an upfront fee, then monthly payments that build their deposit over time. After 3-7 years, they have the option to buy the home at a pre-agreed price, putting the accrued deposit toward the purchase.
OwnHome co-founder James Bowe said he believed their model could suit up to 10% of first home buyers – around 14,000 customers annually.
“We forecast that over the next 12 months, OwnHome will 10x its current portfolio and customer base, just by serving a small subset of the pent up demand”, he said.
“The reality is, the deck is very much stacked against first home buyers, who are going through the process for the first time, battling a market that is working against them. OwnHome brings negotiating clout to help the buyers who need it most.”
Bowe said the typical first homebuyer search takes nine months from beginning to purchase. But OwnHome tackles the due diligence of buying a home.
“We have already been able to cut this painful process by 85%,” he said.
“Over the past 12 months we’ve launched in two states, developed a network of strong capital partners, and established OwnHome as a viable and appealing alternative for those eager to secure their path to homeownership.”
Bowe added that the affordability crisis was driving a surge in applications, with the waitlist now above 3,500 applications.
“For those with high living costs in our major cities, a deposit of nearly $250,000 – the median across most capital cities – is simply unattainable, especially when the market accelerates faster than people can save,” he said.
Credit: Source link
Comments are closed.