AI has brought about the rise of a new phenomenon in the startup world. It’s a startup that almost instantly reaches millions in ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue).
There are many stories of founders growing their annual recurring revenue from zero to $10 million or even up to $100 million in a matter of months.
To be fair, this alone doesn’t bode well for long-term success. Venture capitalists argue that sustained growth is far more important than hyper-rapid growth. Investors want to back companies that have low customer cancellation and payment suspension rates, meaning that their customers are happy. They want their annual or monthly recurring revenue to continue to grow, rather than fluctuate and crash.
Still, this phenomenon is real. As part of Stripe’s annual report released on Tuesday, the payments giant revealed that more new businesses than ever before will start using its products in 2025, and more than half of them, specifically 57%, will be outside the United States. This 2025 cohort grew 50% faster than the cohort that started using Stripe products in 2024. Stripe didn’t provide specific numbers, but said the number of emerging startups reaching $10 million in ARR within three months will double in 2025 compared to 2024.
The letter also noted a 41% increase in company formations last year using Stripe Atlas, the company’s business incorporation tool. Of these startups, 20% billed their first customer within 30 days, up from just 8% in 2020, further highlighting how quickly this new generation of founders is moving.
In comparison, in 2024, the founders were still publicly celebrating reaching $10 million in ARR in three years. This is still a metric worth boasting about by most business standards.
So for all the people on social media who are saying, “Getting to $10M ARR is easier and less risky than building a venture capital-backed unicorn,” or “Just 3 people at an AI-native startup that hit $10M ARR is rewriting entire strategies,” there’s now a little bit of data to back it up.
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