Altman offered to have OpenAI invest in every single startup in this Y Combinator class: tokens for equity.
During a Y Combinator event on Tuesday night, Sam Altman had what YC partner Tyler Bosmeny called a “mic drop moment.” Altman offered $2 million worth of OpenAI tokens to every startup in the current class in exchange for equity in the startup.
In other words, he promised that OpenAI would invest in the whole class, not with cash but with an allotment of AI tokens that startups can use to build their products.
i am excited to see what will happen with tokenmaxxing startups, both for how they work internally and the products they can build.
openai offered to invest $2M in tokens into every startup in the current yc batch.
happy building!
As for how much equity each startup can expect to give up, that can’t be determined at the time it signs the deal. It will depend on how much the startup is worth when it raises its first priced round — a funding round in which investors assign the company a formal valuation.
Y Combinator Managing Director Jared Friedman tells TechCrunch that the deal will be offered as an “uncapped SAFE,” meaning, “it will convert in the next priced round, which is typically the Series A,” he said.
A SAFE is YC’s standard agreement structure for its early-stage companies that raise money before their first “priced” rounds with valuations involved. An uncapped SAFE doesn’t set a ceiling on that valuation, which can benefit founders because the higher the valuation at conversion, the smaller the slice of the company the investor receives.
We’ve seen some discussion on X that this deal could amount to OpenAI holding about 2% equity should a startup hit a $100M valuation, though without seeing the actual terms, we can’t verify that.
For OpenAI, the deal works on two levels. Obviously, it gains equity in this crop of early-stage companies, meaning it profits if they succeed. But it also encourages them to build their business on and with OpenAI. Whether this locks them in for the long term or not, it does mean that they won’t default to OpenAI’s competitors, like Anthropic’s Claude Code.
The tokens themselves may sweeten the deal further: as inference costs continue to fall, what OpenAI is giving away today could cost it very little to produce tomorrow — making the equity it receives in return look increasingly cheap.
Unsurprisingly, there’s already plenty of commentary on X on why this is, and isn’t a good deal for startups.
The pro-deal folks believe the deal helps startups eliminate one of their biggest costs — AI infrastructure bills, which can spiral fast and consume a disproportionate share of an early-stage startup’s budget at a time when money, typically, is already scarce.
The buyer-beware folks have other warnings. Seed investor Jason Calacanis — who has his own competing accelerator and fund — went for the be-afraid-of-Big-Tech warning.
“If you take these tokens, there’s a non-zero chance that OpenAI will study exactly what your startup is doing, copy your idea and put your app into their free offering. This is the classic platform playbook — be careful, founders!” he posted .
The fear that OpenAI and Anthropic could swallow every good AI startup idea is real.
The truth is, should OpenAI want to do that, it can, even when startups simply pay OpenAI for the tokens. By taking an equity stake, OpenAI may have more incentive for the startup’s success, not less.
Plus, as the former head of Y Combinator and a recurring guest speaker, Altman has as much access to every cohort and its ideas as he wants, deal or not.
The bigger question for this YC batch is whether a budget of tokens from a single AI player is worth giving up additional equity. Y Combinator already takes a 7% stake for a $500,000 cash investment in its standard deal.
In exchange, startups get access to YC’s powerful Silicon Valley network of VCs, potential customers, and other founders.
But equity is also precious for startups. Seed investors frequently take 20% or so, too. And startups need equity as compensation for their early employees.
The bigger danger is that a startup will blow through its OpenAI token budget without enough to show for it, having surrendered equity in the process. Still, that may be better than paying for the tokens with cash, an even scarcer resource at that stage.
Topics OpenAI , Startups , TC , Venture , Y Combinator When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission . This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.
Julie Bort Venture Editor Julie Bort is the Startups/Venture Desk editor for TechCrunch.
You can contact or verify outreach from Julie by emailing julie.bort@techcrunch.com or via @Julie188 on X.
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