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AngelList vs Allocations Pricing (2026): What You Actually Pay

AngelList vs Allocations Pricing (2026): What You Actually Pay

AngelList vs Allocations Pricing (2026): What You Actually Pay

In today’s private investing landscape, choosing the right administration and SPV platform is as much about cost transparency and predictability as it is about features and investor experience. As funds and SPVs proliferate — from syndicates to rolling funds to single-deal special purpose vehicles — knowing how each platform structures fees and services is crucial.

Two platforms commonly discussed in this space are AngelList and Allocations. While both enable private market investing and SPV formation, they take very different pricing approaches — one more transactional and carry-oriented, the other transparent and service-focused.

This blog breaks down publicly available AngelList pricing, compares it with Allocations’ published pricing, and explains where each model makes sense — and where Allocations offers better long-term value.

AngelList Pricing: What Public Sources Show (2026)

AngelList does not publish a detailed line-item pricing catalog for all of its products in the way a SaaS provider would. However, several public support pages and pricing docs reveal how costs are structured for SPVs, syndicates, and funds:

SPV / Syndicate Fees

  • AngelList charges a one-time SPV setup fee of about $8,000, plus a state regulatory filing fee (~$2,000), for what it calls a Standard SPV.

  • There is a cap on setup + regulatory fees at 10% of the SPV’s total capital raised, provided the SPV meets the minimum size thresholds.

  • For Follow-On SPVs, the setup fee is lower (e.g., $5,000 + regulatory cost), also with the 10% cap.

  • Add-on services (like international investments, blocker entities, or financial statements) come with separate fees ranging from ~$1,000 up to ~$12,000 depending on complexity.

This setup contrasts with other SPV providers that publish flat menus; AngelList’s pricing reflects services bundled with formation and back-office administration but can vary with optional add-ons.

Carry & Fund Charges

  • If you raise capital from AngelList Platform LPs, the platform takes a 5% carry (carried interest) on profits for capital brought in through the platform.

  • AngelList also offers traditional venture funds and rolling funds where annual fees include a flat fee plus a percentage of fund size, though specific numbers require contacting sales and aren’t published in full detail.

  • General venture investing practices on AngelList may involve standard management fees (e.g., 1–2%) and carry (often ~20%) depending on fund structure.

Key takeaway: AngelList’s pricing is partially public and partially custom, with setup and regulatory fees for SPVs visible, but fund admin and ongoing layers defined case by case via sales.

Allocations Pricing: Public, Transparent & Fixed

By contrast, Allocations publishes clear pricing tiers for SPVs and funds, letting investors and managers plan costs upfront.

Allocations Public Pricing (2026)

Component

Allocations Pricing (Public)

Standard SPV Setup

~$9,950 (one-time)

Premium/Custom SPV

~$19,500 (one-time)

Annual Fund Administration

~$19,500/year

Platform Carry

0%

Reporting

Real-time dashboards

Transparency

Full published pricing

This clear menu reduces ambiguity and allows budgeting around entity formation, onboarding, compliance, reporting, and ongoing administration without surprise performance-based costs.

Pricing Comparison: AngelList vs Allocations

Below is a side-by-side snapshot using publicly sourced pricing and published Allocations rates:

Pricing Component

AngelList (Publicly Known)

Allocations

SPV Setup Fee

~$8,000 + ~$2,000 regulatory (cap 10% of raise)

~$9,950–$19,500 (one-time)

SPV Add-on Fees

Optional add-ons apply

Included / clear menu

Platform Carry

~5% on AngelList LPs

0%

Fund Admin Fee

Custom via sales

~$19,500/year

Cost Transparency

Moderate

High

Pricing Scalability

Varies

Predictable

Interpretation: AngelList’s model reduces upfront cost thresholds — especially as SPVs start without a fixed annual admin fee — but it ties platform economics to outcomes and LP source and leaves many pricing elements negotiated. Allocations favors transparency and fixed cost scheduling though its upfront fees may appear higher.

Feature Comparison

Fees matter most in context of what capabilities you get:

Feature

AngelList

Allocations

Primary Focus

Deals, syndicates, venture funds

Fund & SPV infrastructure

SPV Formation

Yes (with setup + cap filing)

Yes (transparent menu)

Reporting

Periodic

Real-time dashboards

Investor Portal

Platform-centric

Flexible / white-label options

Carry Structure

Yes on platform LPs

No platform carry

Fund Admin

Yes (custom)

Built-in (clear pricing)

AngelList’s ecosystem is strong for deal access, syndicate participation, and capital introductions. Allocations is designed for repeat SPV use, complex fund structures, and operational transparency.

How Pricing Philosophy Affects Investor Value

AngelList’s transactional and platform carry model aligns fees with investment outcomes and LP sourcing through the AngelList marketplace. This can be advantageous for occasional syndicate activity without fixed admin fees — but it makes cost forecasting harder and ties platform economics to deal success.

Allocations’ fixed fee and service-based pricing offers predictable costs and no shared carry, which aligns with investor priorities around clarity of net returns and LP confidence — especially important for institutional and repeat operators.

Final Verdict (Publicly Sourced & Accurate)

  • AngelList: Best suited for investors focused on syndicate investing, deal origination, and marketplace access, with SPV setup fees around ~$8k + regulatory costs and potential platform carry on AngelList LPs.

  • Allocations: Best suited for managers needing institutional-grade SPV and fund operations with transparent pricing, no carry, and a predictable cost structure.

In 2026, as private investing evolves toward more operational sophistication and LP expectations for transparency rise, Allocations’ pricing model delivers clearer long-term economics, while AngelList’s remains appealing where accessibility and marketplace integration are the priority.

Your next deal shouldn't wait.

Your next deal shouldn't wait.

Allocations gets you from idea to funded SPV in days — not weeks.

SOCIAL MEDIA

Allocations secondary market is operated through Allocations Securities, LLC dba AllocationsX, member FINRA/SIPC. To check this firm on BrokerCheck, click on the following link: here. The main FINRA website can be accessed through this link: here. Allocations Securities, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allocations, Inc.

Copyright © Allocations Inc

SOCIAL MEDIA

Allocations secondary market is operated through Allocations Securities, LLC dba AllocationsX, member FINRA/SIPC. To check this firm on BrokerCheck, click on the following link: here. The main FINRA website can be accessed through this link: here. Allocations Securities, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allocations, Inc.

Copyright © Allocations Inc

SOCIAL MEDIA

Allocations secondary market is operated through Allocations Securities, LLC dba AllocationsX, member FINRA/SIPC. To check this firm on BrokerCheck, click on the following link: here. The main FINRA website can be accessed through this link: here. Allocations Securities, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Allocations, Inc.

Copyright © Allocations Inc