Web Analytics

3 Latest Announced Rounds

  • $1,300,000
    Pre-Seed

    3 Investors

    Software Development
    Jun 27th, 2024
  • $38,000,000
    Series B

    4 Investors

    Hospital & Health Care
    Jun 27th, 2024
  • $1,500,000
    Unknown
    Technology, Information and Internet
    Jun 27th, 2024
$1,927.09M Raised in 66 Funding Rounds in the past 7 Days - View All

Funding Round Profile

Aeropay

start up
United States - Chicago, IL
  • 17/05/2024
  • Series B
  • $20,000,000

Aeropay is a financial technology company that helps people move money with bank-to-bank (ACH) transfers. We enable businesses to accept compliant, digital payments, giving customers the freedom to spend. Leaving cash and cards behind and paying with a personal mobile device promotes safety, convenience and a modern lifestyle.

Enabled with sophisticated and secure technology, with compliance at the core, Aeropay is the better way to move money.


Related People

Daniel MullerFounder

Daniel Muller United States - Greater Chicago Area

As CEO, Daniel Muller founded Aeropay in 2017 to create a better, faster and more affordable way to help people move money. Formerly Head of Product and Software Engineering at GPShopper and an Investor with New Colossus Ventures, Dan now leads one of the most advanced payment platforms in FinTech.

Prior to founding Aeropay, Dan acquired over a decade of digital retail, eCommerce, and product experience at Fortune 500 companies. His past clients include Best Buy, Foot Locker, Adidas, Express, Alliance Data and Synchrony. Dan’s expertise has been integral to building Aeropay’s open architecture solutions and offering consumers best-in-class functionality in each layer of the tech stack, including integrated e-commerce, POS, and digital payments solutions.

A Native New Yorker and First Generation Latin American of Uruguayan and Argentine descent, Dan is a member of the Latinx Incubator Program and has been named a Rising Star in Chicago Tech by Crains and to MJ Venture’s 40 Under 40 List. He studied Political Science and Economics at Franklin & Marshall College and is an avid chess player.