Haven automates bookkeeping and surfaces R&D tax credits for startups. Launched a year ago, already profitable – because the category was that underserved.
ENTRY ANGLES
Reach newly registered companies before they adopt competing platforms · Expand service scope from bookkeeping toward financial analysis and CFO-level insights · Integrate AI for high-volume structured data processing in accounting workflows
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Early-stage company acquisition and outreach systems, AI integration for data processing and financial analysis, Full-service financial advisory and CFO-level expertise
AND SPECIFICALLY AN ACCOUNTING FIRM
“”
Haven is a platform for company accounting and tax filing.
It integrates with popular financial systems and payment processors, automatically pulling in transaction data and creating the corresponding accounting entries.
The core functions of such platforms are well understood by anyone who's run a business – so they don't need enumeration here.
One feature worth calling out is specific to startups: R&D tax credits. These credits exist under US law, but very few companies know about them, and even fewer actually claim them. Haven lets eligible companies "spend 10 minutes filing a claim and get $100,000 in tax credits" – though in practice the amounts for early-stage startups are usually much smaller.
Haven's stated competitive advantages: 10% cheaper than outsourced accounting, 10% less time required from founders, 10% more earned on idle cash balances, and 10% more tax savings discovered through the platform.
The platform launched in pilot mode last spring. Since then, Haven has signed 120 client companies, crossed $1M in revenue, and reached operating profitability.
The current round includes 40–50 angel investors. The amount wasn't disclosed, but it's likely in the range of $1M.
The most interesting thing about Haven is that the platform itself isn't particularly interesting. Yet reaching $1M in revenue while being profitable is a threshold most startups with far more "innovative" ideas never clear.
How did they do it?
A few structural choices stand out. Pricing scales with the client's monthly expenses – or possibly the volume of accounting entries – rather than being flat-rate tiers. If Haven is capturing a share of the money flowing through a business, that's worth applauding.
This variable pricing lets Haven earn more from clients who can pay more, while keeping the entry cost low for early-stage companies. That's a fundamentally better model than trying to find a fixed price point that neither scares away clients nor leaves money on the table.
Positioning matters too. Haven calls itself an "accounting firm," not a "platform" – and specifically an accounting firm "for founders."
The "firm not platform" framing signals that Haven takes on the full accounting function turnkey. The client doesn't need to learn the tool; they just get accounting done. This avoids the internal contradiction that plagues many accounting software companies: if the goal is for the user to handle everything themselves, why would you also sell them accountant add-ons? You'd be incentivized to keep self-service mediocre. Haven sells the service. The platform is just the structured interface between the firm and the client.
Targeting founders rather than general business managers also makes sharp sense.
Founders who just started a company are still full of ambition. They believe their time is too valuable to spend on accounting, so they want to delegate everything except product, hiring, and customer acquisition.
The supply side is working in Haven's favor too. The number of people sitting for the CPA exam has dropped 35%. 75% of accountants are approaching retirement age. And the tax code added 150,000 words of new instructions last year alone. The pool of trusted accounting options for early-stage founders is shrinking, which makes Haven's value proposition sharper by the quarter.
Switching costs also operate asymmetrically here. It's nearly impossible to convince an established company to change accounting platforms or firms if what they have "basically works." Founders of new companies have no such attachment. And in the US, more than 5 million new companies are registered each year – each one a potential Haven customer who can be captured before they develop platform inertia.
That kind of constant inflow of new clients creates lock-in at scale. Once founders get comfortable, they tend to stay.
Other startups are moving in the same direction:
Puzzle – [covered here](/review/vnezapno-aktualnaja-tema) in February last year – raised $15.3M for "the new standard in accounting software." Their differentiator: real-time calculation of the financial metrics investors look for during fundraising, turning accounting into financial reporting.
Scaleup Finance – [covered here](/review/samoe-vremja-jetu-shtuku-rasshirit) in March – goes further, offering "CFO as a service" that starts with bookkeeping and taxes at the base level but extends to full financial modeling and growth planning. They've raised $25.6M.
Bilanc – [covered here](/review/bez-jetogo-pribylnym-startapom-ne-stanesh) in February, a recent Y Combinator graduate – takes a different angle: unit economics analysis at the individual client level, tracking both revenue generated and resources consumed per customer.
A [prior review](/review/dengi-masshtab-i-perspektivy) noted that the fastest-digitizing service sectors are those where demand consistently exceeds supply. Accounting and finance fit that description precisely.
And because millions of new companies form each year, there's a perpetually refreshing supply of clients who haven't locked into anything yet – no need to convince anyone to switch.
As [noted previously](/review/odna-iz-luchshih-tem-dlja-vtykanija), accounting and finance are also one of the best areas for AI integration: massive volumes of structured data, high repetition, and a high cost of error – exactly the conditions where AI creates real value without introducing unacceptable risk.
And the trend line points toward an expanding scope: from bookkeeping to financial analysis to strategic management, each step requiring more sophisticated tools and commanding higher fees.
Putting it together: accounting and financial services for new companies is an evergreen opportunity. The playbook:
- Build a systematic way to reach newly registered companies with an offer before they develop platform habits - Expand the service scope upward from bookkeeping toward financial analysis and CFO-level insight - Build on modern technology, including AI - Position as a full-service firm, not a self-serve tool - Price accordingly – and charge what the service is worth.
The "it already exists" objection doesn't hold. The market is enormous, it replenishes itself every year, and the race goes to whoever figures out how to capture new clients fastest.