Ghada Ismail
In the startup scene, raising money is rarely a straight line. Founders often find themselves between major funding milestones, needing extra capital to keep moving forward. This is where two financing tools come in: the bridge round and the extension round. While they sound similar, each serves a distinct purpose and is applied differently depending on the company’s stage and needs.
What is a Bridge Round?
A bridge round is exactly what it sounds like: a bridge. It’s temporary funding that helps a startup “cross over” to its next big milestone. For example, a startup might raise a bridge round to extend its runway until it can close a larger Series A or Series B.
These rounds often come from existing investors, who already believe in the company and want to protect their earlier investment. Sometimes, bridge rounds are structured as convertible notes or SAFE agreements, which postpone the valuation discussion until the next major funding event.
In the MENA region, several startups have turned to bridge rounds. A notable example is Kashat, the Cairo-based fintech offering nano-loans to Egypt’s unbanked population. In 2021, the startup raised $1.75 million in bridge financing, providing the short-term capital it needed to further develop its platform and expand operations before securing larger rounds. This illustrates how bridge funding can give startups in emerging markets the breathing space to strengthen their fundamentals while preparing for the next stage of growth.
What is an Extension Round?
An extension round, by contrast, is not about survival; it’s rather about momentum. In this case, a company has already raised a round, say a Series A, but wants to bring in more capital under the same terms. Instead of rushing into a higher-priced Series B, the startup simply extends its existing round, allowing new or existing investors to participate without changing the valuation.
Extensions are particularly useful when the company is performing well and sees fresh opportunities, but the timing isn’t right for a new fundraising milestone.
For example, UAE-based cloud kitchen giant Kitopi reportedly tapped into extension rounds in its growth phase, bringing in extra firepower from new investors while keeping its valuation steady until it was ready for a much larger jump. In mid-2021, Kitopi closed a $415 million Series C funding round, led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2 with participation from other investors. Later that year—or into early 2022—the company raised an additional $300 million as a Series C extension, bringing the total size of the funding round to approximately $715 million and lifting its valuation to about $1.55 billion.
How Founders Decide Between the Two
So how does a founder know which path makes more sense—bridge or extension? It often comes down to intent.
- If the company is under pressure—perhaps revenue growth slowed, or the market turned tough—a bridge round provides short-term relief until conditions improve.
- If the company is doing well but wants to capitalize on opportunities before the next major raise, an extension round allows for flexibility without the burden of a new valuation.
Both tools have risks. A bridge round can signal distress if not managed carefully, while an extension round could dilute founders more than they’d like. Yet, when used strategically, both can be powerful instruments to keep momentum alive.
Why It Matters in MENA
The startup ecosystem in the Middle East and North Africa is still maturing. Many companies operate in fast-changing regulatory environments and fragmented markets. That means fundraising is not always as predictable as in Silicon Valley.
Bridge and extension rounds offer founders flexibility in navigating this landscape. They buy time, bring in the right investors, and allow companies to align growth with the realities of local markets. As more MENA startups scale beyond their home countries, we’re likely to see these tools used more frequently.
Wrapping Things Up…
For founders in Saudi Arabia and the broader region, the lesson is clear: not every funding story has to fit neatly into the Seed–Series A–Series B path. Sometimes, it’s about building the right bridge or extending what’s already working.
Investors, too, are becoming more open to these structures as they realize the unique challenges startups face in this region. Whether it’s a Saudi fintech waiting on central bank licensing or an Egyptian logistics startup expanding to Africa, bridge and extension rounds are proving to be valuable stopgaps that help startups stay on track.
In the end, the key is transparency. Founders should communicate clearly why they’re raising a bridge or extension, what the money will achieve, and how it sets the stage for the next big leap. Done right, these rounds are not a detour; they’re part of the journey.