Startups made easy. Sorted.

Hero Save Money Starting Business Us
5 min read
Expert reviewed

How to save money when launching your startup

Published:  May 1, 2025
Anthony Rose
Anthony Rose

Starting a business is expensive. There are a ton of things that you have to pay for — legal documents, website development, coding, design, and so on.

The question is, what things can you do to save money? Here are five top tips that might seem obvious but worth keeping in mind when you’re starting your company:

  1. Save on legal fees when starting up
  2. Use free or low-cost tools
  3. Keep your team small and outsource non-core functions
  4. Find funding for your business
  5. Be frugal with marketing

Avoid paying for lawyers when you don’t have to. There are plenty of free or low-cost platforms online that can help to do things like generate non-disclosure agreements, incorporate your company and build a financial model.

Before you spend thousands on a lawyer, check out platforms like SeedLegals for your legal documents or LegalZoom for incorporation in the US. These services give you easy access to legal documents, cap tables, and more — often for just $20-$40 a month instead of paying thousands upfront.

Of course, you may still need a lawyer for some things later on, but for most tasks at incorporation, you don’t.

Should I incorporate my startup as an LLC, an S-corp or a C-corp?
Read our guide to startup incorporation structures

Tip #2: Use free or low-cost tools

Before you hire expensive web developers or pitch deck designers, try one of the many AI-powered sites that can help you create a website or deck without needing to code. These tools let you build professional-looking assets yourself – saving you the cost of paying someone else to do it.

Tip #3: Keep your team small and outsource non-core functions

If you’re building an app or website, see if you can prototype it yourself before hiring developers. Developers are expensive – and much of the early work often gets thrown away once you start testing with real users. Instead, you can use no-code tools like Figma, Canva, or other prototyping platforms to build early versions yourself and create clickable versions of your app. You can also use newer platforms like Lovable (one of the fastest-growing startups globally) to create simple prototypes or even basic working apps without hiring a developer.

When you’re ready to build your real app, you’ll probably need to bring in developers. Today’s AI tools are great for creating simple prototypes but not full-scale apps. The key is to use these tools early: every time a user struggles with your design, you can tweak the wording or move buttons yourself – without paying for expensive re-coding. Once users clearly understand and navigate your prototype, that’s the right time to invest in building the real thing.

Tip #4: Find funding for your business

If your business needs money to build a product and grow, either you’ll be paying for it yourself, or you’ll need other people to fund it. So your choices are:

  1. Put your own money into it
  2. Get money from grants and so on
  3. Borrow money from the bank
  4. Raise money from VCs
  5. Raise money from angel investors

Let’s go through these quickly and see what’s likely to work and what’s not.

Self-funding: Start with your own money if you can

It’s easier to not have to raise money, so if you can fund it yourself, try to do it yourself. Our SeedLegals data shows that founders put a median of about $35,000 of their own money into a company before they raise external investment.

At some point, you may run out of personal funds or hit a ceiling on how much progress you can make without external support. That’s when you’ll need to look for other sources of funding to keep growing.

Grants: Nice if you can get them

You can try applying for grants, but they are often slow, highly competitive and usually limited to specific industries or university spinouts. Grants are worth trying for if you qualify, but they shouldn’t be your main plan.

Venture Capital: Often only interested at a later stage

If you go to a VC too early, before you’ve got revenue, inevitably they’ll say “Love what you’re doing, come back later.” So VCs are probably a waste of time until you’ve got paying users.

Bank loans: Rare for early-stage startups

You can only get a loan from a bank if your company is already making revenue and profits, so you can afford to repay it. Otherwise, you risk going bankrupt. That’s why startups rarely borrow money from banks – first, because banks won’t lend to companies without revenue, and second, because without income, you’re unlikely to be able to repay the debt when it’s due.

Angel investors: The most realistic option

This is why most early-stage startups raise money from angel investors. Angel investors are individuals who typically invest anywhere from $10,000 or $20,000 or $5,000 or $500. What you want to do is find multiple angel investors to raise $50,000 through to a few hundred thousand dollars to help fund your business.

Strictly speaking, this isn’t a money-saving tip – but it’s a way to conserve your own money by having other people invest their money in your startup.

Use QSBS to make your startup more attractive to investors
Surprisingly few founders know about it, but qualified small business stock (QSBS) allows founders and early investors to potentially receive a 100% exemption on federal capital gains taxes, up to $10 million or 10 times their original investment amount.

Read our guide to QSBS to find out if your company qualifies, how it can make your company more attractive to investors and potential employees, and how to benefit from the tax break yourself.

Tip #5: Be frugal with marketing

Do everything you can to avoid paying Google or Facebook for ads. They already have way more money than you – don’t give them even more until you’ve proven you’ve got a proper business model, where you’re making more from a customer (known as the lifetime value, or LTV) than you spend on acquiring them (known as the customer acquisition cost, or CAC).

The problem is, you’ve built your app, your website is live… and nobody’s coming. So how do you fix that?

The obvious answer is to buy pay-per-click ads on Google or social networks (PPC). But unless you’ve already proven that people will buy your product, you’ll just be spending a lot of money acquiring users who bail shortly afterwards.

You want to do everything you can to avoid that. Only start buying paid ads once you’ve raised seed or Series A funding, have plenty of cash in the bank and have proven product-market fit. That’s when you’re ready to scale.

In the meantime, focus on things like content marketing (writing articles and getting them published online), posting regularly on LinkedIn and using SEO (writing articles on your own website that rank well in search). If your customers form communities, lean into community-led growth – join those communities and build relationships. Partnerships with other companies are also a great way to get inbound links and referral traffic.

Whatever you do, avoid paying for ads until you’ve proven your business and revenue model.

Stay connected and build smarter

Building a company is tough — and knowing where to spend (and where to save) can be the difference between stalling and scaling. Hopefully, these tips gave you a head start on keeping your costs low and your business moving.

Want more real-world advice from founders and investors who’ve been there? Sign up for our events newsletter to stay in the know — and don’t miss your next opportunity to learn, network and grow.

Need hands-on help?

If you need a hand with your cap table, fundraising or legal documents like employment agreements and NDAs, our team is here to help.

Get in touch – we’ve helped thousands of founders do it faster, cheaper, and with a lot less stress.

Get answers fast, for free

Bring all your questions - we’ve got the answers! We’ll match you with the right specialist.

Anthony Rose

Anthony Rose

Serial entrepreneur and startup champion, Anthony is our CEO and Co-Founder.
Read more
Seedlegals Team Chat Small Img Blog ad sidebar image
Get your answers fast,
for free
We're here to help!
Bring your questions - we got the answers

Start your journey with us