Ramp just closed a $750 million Series F round that values the company at $44 billion. To put that in perspective, that’s roughly the market cap of some S&P 500 companies, and Ramp is still private.
The round, announced on June 4, 2026, was led by ICONIQ, GIC, and the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan. Goldman Sachs Alternatives, D.E. Shaw & Co., and Morgan Stanley Investment Management also joined as new investors. Total equity raised by the company now exceeds $3 billion.
From corporate cards to a $44B financial operations platform
Here’s the thing about Ramp’s trajectory: in November 2025, the company was valued at $32 billion. Six months later, it tacked on another $12 billion. Go back a little further, to early 2025, and the valuation sat between $13 billion and $16 billion. That means Ramp’s worth has roughly tripled in about 18 months.
CEO Eric Glyman has framed the company’s evolution as a transformation from a simple corporate card provider into a comprehensive financial operations platform. The numbers back that up. Ramp now generates annualized revenues exceeding $1 billion. The platform currently supports over 50,000 teams. Its services span corporate cards, expense management, procurement, accounting tools, and, increasingly, AI-native features designed to automate financial workflows.
Ramp isn’t just using AI to improve its existing products. It’s building tools specifically designed to help companies monitor and manage their AI token expenditures, which is quickly becoming a meaningful line item on corporate balance sheets. The company is also developing AI agents for procurement and accounting workflows that can handle approvals, flag anomalies, and negotiate vendor terms autonomously.
What this means for investors and the broader fintech landscape
When Goldman Sachs Alternatives, GIC, and the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan all write checks into the same round, it signals institutional conviction that AI-powered financial infrastructure represents a significant opportunity. With annualized revenue north of $1 billion and a clear growth narrative tied to AI, the company has the profile that public market investors tend to favor.
For competitors in the corporate spend management space like Brex, Divvy, and legacy players like SAP Concur, Ramp’s fundraise raises the stakes considerably. A $44 billion competitor with $3 billion in total equity raised can afford to invest aggressively in product development, sales, and geographic expansion.
A $44 billion valuation on $1 billion-plus in annualized revenue implies the market is pricing in substantial future expansion. Ramp’s trajectory from a $13 billion valuation to $44 billion in roughly 18 months is a clear example of the premium valuations commanded by companies building differentiated AI-driven products.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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