A cap table is not a spreadsheet. It is the legal map of who owns the company.
That distinction matters because fundraising breaks when the spreadsheet says one thing, the shareholders' agreement says another, a founder promised advisor equity in Slack, and three convertible instruments convert differently depending on who reads the term sheet.
This guide explains how European founders should think about cap tables, SAFE vs convertible notes in Europe, and term sheet red flags before a seed or Series A round. It is the deep dive that sits next to our VC due diligence checklist.
The Short Version
- Your cap table must match signed legal documents. Investor spreadsheets do not fix bad issuance history.
- SAFEs are not automatically portable from the US. European jurisdictions often require adapted structures and local conversion mechanics.
- Germany usually likes convertible loans better than pure SAFEs. GmbH share issuances and transfers have form and notarisation issues.
- Spain and Portugal can support startup financing, but local tax and corporate rules matter. Do not paste a YC template into Iberian law and hope for elegance.
- The red flags are economic and governance terms. Liquidation preferences, anti-dilution, option pool math, veto rights, and founder vesting can matter more than valuation.
1. What a Clean Cap Table Actually Shows
A clean startup cap table answers four questions:
- Who owns shares today?
- Who has the right to receive shares later?
- What happens when all convertible instruments convert?
- What ownership remains for founders, employees, and investors after the round?
The founder mistake is treating only question one as the cap table. Investors care about all four.
Include these rows
- Founders: Shares issued, vesting or reverse vesting, good leaver and bad leaver treatment.
- Employees and advisors: Granted options, promised but unissued grants, exercised options, phantom rights, VSOP or ESOP participation.
- Existing investors: Ordinary shares, preference shares, shareholder rights, side letters.
- SAFEs and convertible notes: Amount, valuation cap, discount, MFN, interest, maturity, conversion trigger, conversion mechanics.
- Option pool: Existing pool, granted options, unallocated pool, and whether the new pool is calculated pre-money or post-money.
2. SAFE vs Convertible Note vs Priced Round
A SAFE is an agreement for future equity. It is popular because it avoids setting a full priced-round valuation and is usually simpler than debt. In Europe, it needs caution. Some jurisdictions can adapt SAFE-like instruments. Others prefer convertible loans because the legal category is clearer.
A convertible note is debt that converts into equity. It normally has principal, interest, maturity, conversion triggers, valuation cap, and discount. European investors and lawyers often prefer this because debt is an understood legal category.
A priced round sets valuation now and issues shares now. It is slower and more expensive, but it creates clearer ownership, governance, and investor rights. For Series A, and often for institutional seed rounds, it becomes the cleaner route.
Jurisdiction notes
- Portugal: Portuguese founders often raise cross-border. Financing documents should handle shareholder approvals, tax, option pools, and future holding-structure questions.
- Spain: Spanish rounds can use local structures such as participative loans and adapted convertible instruments. Conversion terms should match local corporate mechanics.
- Germany: German GmbH law has form requirements for share issuances and transfers. Convertible loan agreements are often more familiar than pure US-style SAFEs.
3. Term Sheet Red Flags
- Liquidation preference: Watch participating preferred, preferences above 1x, accruing preferred returns, or multiple stacked preferences.
- Anti-dilution: Broad-based weighted average is more balanced. Full ratchet is aggressive and can shift dilution heavily onto founders and employees.
- Option pool math: If the pool increase is pre-money, the dilution usually comes from founders rather than the new investor.
- Founder vesting reset: Negotiate credit for time served, acceleration mechanics, and good leaver definitions.
- Veto rights: Investor consent rights should protect major actions, not block ordinary operations.
- Conversion ambiguity: SAFEs and notes should state whether they convert before or after pool increases and whether they join the same preference stack.
4. Pre-Term-Sheet Founder Checklist
- Reconcile the cap table against signed documents.
- List every promised but unissued equity grant.
- Model all SAFEs, notes, interest, discounts, caps, and MFN rights.
- Confirm founder vesting and leaver terms are signed.
- Prepare a fully diluted post-round cap table scenario.
- Define the option pool size based on a hiring plan, not investor vibes.
- Put all core documents in your data room before the first partner meeting.
Authoritative Sources
- Cuatrecasas: key aspects of VC transactions in the Iberian Peninsula
- Heuking: annotated VC term sheet template
- Compleneo: startup financing from seed to Series A in Germany
- Y Combinator: SAFE financing documents
Legal Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, investment, or corporate finance advice. Financing terms vary by jurisdiction, company form, investor, and transaction structure. Consult qualified legal and tax counsel before signing financing documents.
Reviewed by Outlex Legal Team
This content was reviewed by qualified legal professionals with experience advising European startups on compliance, contracts, and corporate matters. Outlex is backed by a major Portuguese law firm with expertise across EU jurisdictions.
Last updated: 2026-06-17



