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Seapoint Raises €7.5M Seed to Build an AI-Native Financial Home for European Startups

Dublin-based fintech Seapoint has announced a €7.5 million seed round led by London fintech specialist 13books Capital, bringing total funding to €10 million just over a year after the company was founded by former Stripe European CIO Sean Mullaney. The round represents one of the larger early-stage fintech deals to close in Ireland this year and underlines investor appetite for platforms that consolidate the financial stack used by venture-backed companies.

Existing investors Frontline Ventures and Tapestry VC participated in the round, alongside more than 40 angel investors. Notable individual backers include Claire Hughes Johnson, the former chief operating officer of Stripe; Laurence Krieger, former UK chief executive of Tide and ex-chief operating officer of Revolut; Intercom co-founder Des Traynor; and Kota chief executive Luke Mackey. Michael McFadgen of 13books Capital joins Seapoint’s board as part of the transaction.

From Stripe alumni to a consolidated financial operations platform

Seapoint was incorporated in January 2025 by a founding team that is majority-Stripe by lineage, with additional alumni from Wise, Wayflyer, Nubank and Tide. The company’s thesis is that venture-backed startups waste too much time stitching together the patchwork of banking, payments, payroll, expenses and accounting tools that accumulates after incorporation. Seapoint aims to replace that patchwork with a single, AI-native platform that imports existing systems and automates the financial admin that sits between founders and their product.

The platform bundles business accounts, treasury management, payroll, expenses, invoicing and reporting into one interface. According to the company, its AI layer can import and connect a startup’s existing banking, email and accounting data within about ten minutes, after which routine bookkeeping, reconciliation and reporting tasks are automated. Additional features include multi-currency accounts, payments, corporate cards and foreign-exchange services.

“More than half the Seapoint team are Stripe alumni,” said Sean Mullaney in the announcement. The pitch, in effect, is that a team which built the payments infrastructure of a previous era now believes the same disciplined approach is needed to rebuild the financial back office of modern startups.

13books Capital leads a well-populated fintech syndicate

The decision by 13books Capital to lead the round is consistent with its portfolio bias towards European B2B fintech, with prior investments spanning treasury, reconciliation and embedded-finance categories. Michael McFadgen’s board seat suggests the firm sees Seapoint as a multi-round position rather than a tactical entry.

The participation of more than 40 angel investors is unusually broad for a seed round and reflects the founders’ network. Claire Hughes Johnson’s involvement is particularly notable: her reputation for operational rigour at Stripe makes her one of the most sought-after angels in European B2B software. The presence of Laurence Krieger, Des Traynor and Luke Mackey adds a second layer of operating-led capital from founders who have each built scaled products in adjacent categories.

Frontline Ventures and Tapestry VC, who led earlier funding, re-upped in the seed round. That signal matters: re-investment from existing backers is typically the clearest endorsement available at this stage.

A maturing category with familiar competitors

Seapoint is entering a category that is no longer empty. Established neobanks such as Revolut Business and Tide serve millions of SME customers; Qonto and Finom compete aggressively in continental Europe; Mercury and Brex have defined the equivalent American market; and a new cohort of AI-native operating platforms — Puzzle, Rillet, Numeric and Ramp — is pushing into finance automation. Seapoint’s specific wager is that European venture-backed startups require a bundled, operations-first alternative, combining licensed banking services with automated reporting rather than stitching together point tools.

The company targets venture-backed startups from pre-seed through Series A in the UK and Ireland, with self-service sign-up now open to all founders in both markets. The €7.5 million is intended to fund expansion across continental Europe, deepen the AI layer and extend the platform’s banking feature set.

What to watch next

Three questions will determine how far Seapoint can push this round. First, can the platform sustain the ten-minute import-and-automate claim as customer data gets messier? Second, how quickly can it move beyond the UK and Ireland into the French, German and Nordic markets where Qonto and Finom have established positions? Third, at what point does it move from seed-stage angel momentum to institutional Series A conviction?

For founders, Seapoint is a useful addition to the market. For investors, it is an indication that AI-native financial operations is now a fundable category in Europe, rather than a US phenomenon. For further coverage of European fintech fundraising, see the Sesamers fundraising hub.

Source: Sifted.

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