Home / Post Money SAFE Cap Explained Line by Line

Post Money SAFE Cap Explained Line by Line

Post Money SAFE Cap Explained Line by Line

Tl;dr: SAFE cap version of the Y-combinator post-money SAFE financing document explained line by line explanation.

If you are planning on raising an angel/seed round with a new post-money SAFE you need to know what is in the legal agreement. You aren’t a lawyer, so I’m going to explain the whole document in simple English.

I’m going to cover each of the 5 documents that Y-Combinator offer. If you are going to use another one, you can link to the right blog here:

All quotes are the exact wording of the SAFE documents. Everything else are my comments. For idiots, this is not legal advice, I take no responsibility for any losses, get a lawyer, yada yada.

For syntax, I’m going to assume you raise at a series-A. That’s the word for the qualified financing round I am going to use.

Note: there are a number of places where there are numbers involved. I’m not going to nerd out here on how the math is done. Instead, I made a model with the math done. Download the model and you can see how the math is done. You can read the blog here.

Download the SAFE model

Investor warning

THIS INSTRUMENT AND ANY SECURITIES ISSUABLE PURSUANT HERETO HAVE NOT BEEN REGISTERED UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED (THE “SECURITIES ACT”), OR UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS OF CERTAIN STATES.  THESE SECURITIES MAY NOT BE OFFERED, SOLD OR OTHERWISE TRANSFERRED, PLEDGED OR HYPOTHECATED EXCEPT AS PERMITTED IN THIS SAFE AND UNDER THE ACT AND APPLICABLE STATE SECURITIES LAWS PURSUANT TO AN EFFECTIVE REGISTRATION STATEMENT OR AN EXEMPTION THEREFROM.

This is a warning to investors. It’s boring. You don’t care.

It basically says that only sophisticated investors can and should invest in startup land and they can’t sell off their investment to other people.

Company name for the SAFE Cap

[Company Name]

You need to input your legal name. It’s one of only 7 fields other than signature stuff you need to fill in.

How much the investor is investing

SAFE

(Simple Agreement for Future Equity)

THIS CERTIFIES THAT in exchange for the payment by [Investor Name] (the “Investor”) of $[_____________] (the “Purchase Amount”) on or about [Date of Safe], [Company Name], a [State of Incorporation] corporation (the “Company”), issues to the Investor the right to certain shares of the Company’s Capital Stock, subject to the terms described below.

You need to input:

  • The investor name. E.g. Sequoia
  • The amount in Dollars the investor is investing. E.g. $200,000
  • The date you are signing this document and it comes into effect. E.g. 1 January 2020
  • Your company name. E.g. Uber
  • The state you are incorporated in. E.g. Delaware

This says that for an investment in the SAFE Cap, the investor gets shares in your company as will be set out in a minute.

Don’t change the document

This Safe is one of the forms available at https://ycombinator.com/documents and the Company and the Investor agree that neither one has modified the form, except to fill in blanks and bracketed terms.

The new post-money SAFE makes an effort to say that no one can change the document other than in the brackets. The goal is to restrict changes so you don’t need a lawyer. Everyone knows it is the same. If everyone is ok with the SAFE in principle, there are no other changes to make. There is no funny business!

Setting the cap

The “Post-Money Valuation Cap” is $[_____________].  See Section 2 for certain additional defined terms.

This document only has a cap. There is no discount.

You need to input:

  • The cap in Dollars. E.g. $500,000

The valuation cap sets the ceiling on the price per share they will pay at the series-A round. You are setting a valuation with this structure if you weren’t aware of the fact.

The additional defined term you want to notice is: “Safe Price” means the price per share equal to the Post-Money Valuation Cap divided by the Company Capitalization.”

That’s how the price per share is calculated.

  1. Events

(a)  Equity Financing. If there is an Equity Financing before the termination of this Safe, on the initial closing of such Equity Financing, this Safe will automatically convert into the greater of: (1) the number of shares of Standard Preferred Stock equal to the Purchase Amount divided by the lowest price per share of the Standard Preferred Stock; or (2) the number of shares of Safe Preferred Stock equal to the Purchase Amount divided by the Safe Price.

Equity financing means the series-A round. When the note converts they will choose whatever give them the best terms:

  1. The same price as the series-A investor: what they invested divided by price the series-a investor pay
  2. Their price: What they invested divided by the price that the cap would give them.

This is effectively a full ratchet. This is bad for the founders. It means that the founders will get diluted if the pre-money at series-A is not high enough (near/below the cap). This was not the case in the pre note.

In connection with the automatic conversion of this Safe into shares of Standard Preferred Stock or Safe Preferred Stock, the Investor will execute and deliver to the Company all of the transaction documents related to the Equity Financing; provided, that such documents are the same documents to be entered into with the purchasers of Standard Preferred Stock, with appropriate variations for the Safe Preferred Stock if applicable, and provided further, that such documents have customary exceptions to any drag-along applicable to the Investor, including, without limitation, limited representations and warranties and limited liability and indemnification obligations on the part of the Investor.

SAFE Cap investors will get and sign the same docs as series-a investors.

The next part says the docs will have “customary exceptions” to the “drag along” provisions. Customary exceptions relate to bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization or other similar provisions affecting creditors’ rights generally.

In the case of the discount and cap note, this is worded differently with the shares only converting into Safe Preferred Stock. Where the price of the cap is above that of the series-a investor, the discount would always apply and so the discount option would always be favored. In the cap only version, there is no discount, so the difference in price is adjusted with a full ratchet.

(b)  Liquidity Event.  If there is a Liquidity Event before the termination of this Safe, this Safe will automatically be entitled to receive a portion of Proceeds, due and payable to the Investor immediately prior to, or concurrent with, the consummation of such Liquidity Event, equal to the greater of (i) the Purchase Amount (the “Cash-Out Amount”) or (ii) the amount payable on the number of shares of Common Stock equal to the Purchase Amount divided by the Liquidity Price (the “Conversion Amount”).  If any of the Company’s securityholders are given a choice as to the form and amount of Proceeds to be received in a Liquidity Event, the Investor will be given the same choice, provided that the Investor may not choose to receive a form of consideration that the Investor would be ineligible to receive as a result of the Investor’s failure to satisfy any requirement or limitation generally applicable to the Company’s securityholders, or under any applicable laws.

Liquidity event means that you sell the company. This section tells you how SAFE Cap investors get paid out if you exit before you have a series-a. They get either:

  1. The amount they invested
  2. The amount they would get if they converted to shares. Liquidity price and capitalization are defined later.

The final part is about being treated fairly. If other investors get a choice of how they are paid, they get the same choice, unless that would violate some law.

Notwithstanding the foregoing, in connection with a Change of Control intended to qualify as a tax-free reorganization, the Company may reduce the cash portion of Proceeds payable to the Investor by the amount determined by its board of directors in good faith for such Change of Control to qualify as a tax-free reorganization for U.S. federal income tax purposes, provided that such reduction (A) does not reduce the total Proceeds payable to such Investor and (B) is applied in the same manner and on a pro rata basis to all securityholders who have equal priority to the Investor under Section 1(d).

This is an edge case. If the company changes its structure (Section 368(A)(1) outlines a format for tax treatment to reorganizations) due to an acquisition or something, the SAFE investors don’t get disadvantaged. They are happy for money to be spent so long as the SAFE investor gets what they are owed and that everyone with the same ranking get treated the same way. Section 1(d) the “liquidity priority” is defined later. This is nerdy stuff you don’t’ really need to know about as you will definitely have a lawyer deal with it.

(c)  Dissolution Event. If there is a Dissolution Event before the termination of this Safe, the Investor will automatically be entitled to receive a portion of Proceeds equal to the Cash-Out Amount, due and payable to the Investor immediately prior to the consummation of the Dissolution Event.

If the company is shut down (dissolves) before the series-a, the SAFE investors will get what they invested (cash-out amount) in proportion to whatever is left. More than likely there will be nothing! But if there is something they get it before you close the company.

(d)  Liquidation Priority.  In a Liquidity Event or Dissolution Event, this Safe is intended to operate like standard non-participating Preferred Stock.  The Investor’s right to receive its Cash-Out Amount is:

If you sell or shut down the company, the SAFE investor gets only their money back. Participating preferred means your money plus what you get if you convert to stock. They then explain the order of how people are paid back.

(i)         Junior to payment of outstanding indebtedness and creditor claims, including contractual claims for payment and convertible promissory notes (to the extent such convertible promissory notes are not actually or notionally converted into Capital Stock);

Junior means they get paid after anyone who is senior.

SAFE Cap are junior to general creditors and convertible notes (so long as they remain the debt bit and don’t convert to equity).

(ii)        On par with payments for other Safes and/or Preferred Stock, and if the applicable Proceeds are insufficient to permit full payments to the Investor and such other Safes and/or Preferred Stock, the applicable Proceeds will be distributed pro rata to the Investor and such other Safes and/or Preferred Stock in proportion to the full payments that would otherwise be due; and

They have an equal right to receive what money is left after debt/creditors are paid to other SAFE investors and preference investors. Every one of the same level gets a proportional share.

(iii)       Senior to payments for Common Stock.

The Investor’s right to receive its Conversion Amount is (A) on par with payments for Common Stock and other Safes and/or Preferred Stock who are also receiving Conversion Amounts or Proceeds on a similar as-converted to Common Stock basis, and (B) junior to payments described in clauses (i) and (ii) above (in the latter case, to the extent such payments are Cash-Out Amounts or similar liquidation preferences).

SAFE Cap rank above people who have common stock. That means founders and staff. So founders and staff are the last to get any money!

More specifically:

  1. SAFE rank if there is a conversion to stock happening, so other SAFEs
  2. Rank above what we talked about already (basically repeating itself)

(e)  Termination.  This Safe will automatically terminate (without relieving the Company of any obligations arising from a prior breach of or non-compliance with this Safe) immediately following the earliest to occur of: (i) the issuance of Capital Stock to the Investor pursuant to the automatic conversion of this Safe under Section 1(a); or (ii) the payment, or setting aside for payment, of amounts due the Investor pursuant to Section 1(b) or Section 1(c).

Termination of the SAFE Cap has been mentioned a few times. Now it is defined. The SAFE Cap will last forever unless it terminates when the investor is either

  1. Issued series-a shares, or
  2. Gets paid cash in a few scenarios.

Now we are at the definitions section.

  1. Definitions

Capital Stock” means the capital stock of the Company, including, without limitation, the “Common Stock” and the “Preferred Stock.”

Just defines all the shares you might have.

Change of Control” means (i) a transaction or series of related transactions in which any “person” or “group” (within the meaning of Section 13(d) and 14(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended), becomes the “beneficial owner” (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended), directly or indirectly, of more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities of the Company having the right to vote for the election of members of the Company’s board of directors, (ii) any reorganization, merger or consolidation of the Company, other than a transaction or series of related transactions in which the holders of the voting securities of the Company outstanding immediately prior to such transaction or series of related transactions retain, immediately after such transaction or series of related transactions, at least a majority of the total voting power represented by the outstanding voting securities of the Company or such other surviving or resulting entity or (iii) a sale, lease or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company.

Change of control generally means you sell the company- typically when you sell more than 50%. This is referenced when we talked about a liquidity event above. Most of this is legalise.

Company Capitalization” is calculated as of immediately prior to the Equity Financing and (without double-counting):

  • Includes all shares of Capital Stock issued and outstanding;
  • Includes all Converting Securities;
  • Includes all (i) issued and outstanding Options and (ii) Promised Options;
  • Includes the Unissued Option Pool; and
  • Excludes, notwithstanding the foregoing, any increases to the Unissued Option Pool (except to the extent necessary to cover Promised Options that exceed the Unissued Option Pool) in connection with the Equity Financing.

The company capitalization is used when defining the price per share.

This is:

  • The shares founders and staff have in shares
  • Convertible notes and SAFEs (Defined next)
  • Options you have given to staff (ESOP). Promised options are a bit random- that’s what you said you will give to people but the board hasn’t approved yet for whatever reason. How these are dealt with depends (Investors are incentivized to ignore them!)
  • Shares/options which haven’t been assigned to staff (It’s your option pool)
  • Does not include increases in your ESOP between rounds (unless covers promised options). The post SAFE does include the ESOP increase that S-A investors ask for when they ask for a post-money ESOP of say 10%

Converting Securities” includes this Safe and other convertible securities issued by the Company, including but not limited to: (i) other Safes; (ii) convertible promissory notes and other convertible debt instruments; and (iii) convertible securities that have the right to convert into shares of Capital Stock.

These are any notes which are going to convert at the series-a. This includes:

  1. Other SAFE you issued
  2. Convertible notes
  3. I don’t know whatever else that converts

Dissolution Event” means (i) a voluntary termination of operations, (ii) a general assignment for the benefit of the Company’s creditors or (iii) any other liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company (excluding a Liquidity Event), whether voluntary or involuntary.

Dissolution is shutting down the company as I mentioned before. There are reasons for this:

  1. You decide to shut down (You need the board to approve)
  2. You have to do it to make people you owe money happy
  3. Whatever reason to shut down (Other than selling the company)

Voluntary means you choose to, involuntary means you are made to.

Dividend Amount” means, with respect to any date on which the Company pays a dividend on its outstanding Common Stock, the amount of such dividend that is paid per share of Common Stock multiplied by (x) the Purchase Amount divided by (y) the Liquidity Price (treating the dividend date as a Liquidity Event solely for purposes of calculating such Liquidity Price).

Dividends is you making so much cash that you don’t know how to spend it properly to grow the company so you pay it out in cash. If you do pay out a dividend, then they define how much money the SAFE Cap investor gets.

Equity Financing” means a bona fide transaction or series of transactions with the principal purpose of raising capital, pursuant to which the Company issues and sells Preferred Stock at a fixed valuation, including but not limited to, a pre-money or post-money valuation.

The series-a is only a real round if you are raising money and issue preference shares. This doesn’t apply if the series-a is convertible. It also doesn’t matter if the valuation is based on pre or post-money.

Initial Public Offering” means the closing of the Company’s first firm commitment underwritten initial public offering of Common Stock pursuant to a registration statement filed under the Securities Act.

You do an IPO. Simple.

Liquidity Capitalization” is calculated as of immediately prior to the Liquidity Event, and (without double- counting):

  • Includes all shares of Capital Stock issued and outstanding;
  • Includes all (i) issued and outstanding Options and (ii) to the extent receiving Proceeds, Promised Options;
  • Includes all Converting Securities, other than any Safes and other convertible securities (including without limitation shares of Preferred Stock) where the holders of such securities are receiving Cash-Out Amounts or similar liquidation preference payments in lieu of Conversion Amounts or similar “as-converted” payments; and
  • Excludes the Unissued Option Pool.

This is a calculation used in part of the liquidity price (Post-Money Valuation Cap divided by the Liquidity Capitalization). It’s the share denominator. Simply put it’s the shares outstanding (ex-promised and unissued), grossed up for the dilution from the SAFE notes and includes any pre-SAFE-notes.

  •  All the founder/staff shares
  • Options in the ESOP that have been issued
  • Convertible notes, not post SAFEs, but pre SAFEs
  • Does NOT include unissued and promised (likely) shares

Liquidity Event” means a Change of Control or an Initial Public Offering.

Your startup makes money by selling 50%+ or an IPO.

Liquidity Price” means the price per share equal to the Post-Money Valuation Cap divided by the Liquidity Capitalization.

Relates to the liquidity capitalization above. You divide the cap over the liquidity cap.

Options” includes options, restricted stock awards or purchases, RSUs, SARs, warrants or similar securities, vested or unvested.

This is basically your ESOP.

Proceeds” means cash and other assets (including without limitation stock consideration) that are proceeds from the Liquidity Event or the Dissolution Event, as applicable, and legally available for distribution.

Proceeds are money you make if you sell. It’s cash, bitches!

Promised Options” means promised but ungranted Options that are the greater of those (i) promised pursuant to agreements or understandings made prior to the execution of, or in connection with, the term sheet for the Equity Financing (or the initial closing of the Equity Financing, if there is no term sheet), or (ii) treated as outstanding Options in the calculation of the Standard Preferred Stock’s price per share.

I’ve never dealt with promised options. But they clearly exist if you are not on the ball. You say to people they are going to get options, but you’re a dick and don’t give them to them.

Safe” means an instrument containing a future right to shares of Capital Stock, similar in form and content to this instrument, purchased by investors for the purpose of funding the Company’s business operations.  References to “this Safe” mean this specific instrument.

They define the SAFE Cap for shites and giggles.

Safe Preferred Stock” means the shares of the series of Preferred Stock issued to the Investor in an Equity Financing, having the identical rights, privileges, preferences and restrictions as the shares of Standard Preferred Stock, other than with respect to: (i) the per share liquidation preference and the initial conversion price for purposes of price-based anti-dilution protection, which will equal the Safe Price; and (ii) the basis for any dividend rights, which will be based on the Safe Price.

SAFE Cap turn into a class of preferred stock called safe preferred stock. It ‘s basically the same as what series-a investors get but because of nerdy stuff, you create a shadow class of shares. It’s one of the few founder friendly, super-nerd things that are beneficial to founders.

What is different is:

  1. SAFE only get the liquidation preference they paid for
  2. The way dividends are paid are in line with the SAFE terms

Notes:

  • Liquidation preference overhang: There was one in the pre-money SAFE. The new one doesn’t. The overhang leads to an investor having more liquidity preference than they paid for when they convert at series-A (Meaning they get paid out before you, which isn’t good). The new SAFE creates a sub-series of stock such as “Series A-1”. The difference is explained later as:
    • having the identical rights, privileges, preferences and restrictions as the shares of Standard Preferred Stock, other than with respect to:
      • (i) the per share liquidation preference and the initial conversion price for purposes of price-based anti-dilution protection, which will equal the Safe Price; and
      • (ii) the basis for any dividend rights, which will be based on the Safe Price.

This means the price at conversion when there is an exit match what they are owed, not a bigger number they didn’t pay for.

Safe Price” means the price per share equal to the Post-Money Valuation Cap divided by the Company Capitalization.

The SAFE Cap notes convert at their SAFE price. If the cap is $4m and the shares are $11m, that’s their price. In the post-SAFE the SAFE investors can pick the SAFE price of the series-a price- whatever is lower.

Standard Preferred Stock” means the shares of the series of Preferred Stock issued to the investors investing new money in the Company in connection with the initial closing of the Equity Financing.

These are the shares that the series-a investors get.

Unissued Option Pool” means all shares of Capital Stock that are reserved, available for future grant and not subject to any outstanding Options or Promised Options (but in the case of a Liquidity Event, only to the extent Proceeds are payable on such Promised Options) under any equity incentive or similar Company plan.

This is your ESOP. You have shares that haven’t been given to anyone.

Promised options are not definitively granted to investors so this stuff isn’t included. Think of it this way. You may have good intentions, investors want to make money. They will screw anyone when it comes to making money.

  1. Company Representations

(a)  The Company is a corporation duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of its state of incorporation, and has the power and authority to own, lease and operate its properties and carry on its business as now conducted.

Your company is kosher. Investors don’t want any shady shite. You have filed all the required incorporation paperwork with the Secretary of State of the state you are incorporated in. Delaware is the place most investors have expected you to have filed in (Stripe Atlas help with this).

(b)  The execution, delivery and performance by the Company of this Safe is within the power of the Company and has been duly authorized by all necessary actions on the part of the Company (subject to section 3(d)). This Safe constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of the Company, enforceable against the Company in accordance with its terms, except as limited by bankruptcy, insolvency or other laws of general application relating to or affecting the enforcement of creditors’ rights generally and general principles of equity.  To its knowledge, the Company is not in violation of (i) its current certificate of incorporation or bylaws, (ii) any material statute, rule or regulation applicable to the Company or (iii) any material debt or contract to which the Company is a party or by which it is bound, where, in each case, such violation or default, individually, or together with all such violations or defaults, could reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the Company.

You and your board of directors have approved the SAFE Cap so it’s not shady! The docs have been changed and board approved. Boring legal stuff.

(c)  The performance and consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Safe do not and will not: (i) violate any material judgment, statute, rule or regulation applicable to the Company; (ii) result in the acceleration of any material debt or contract to which the Company is a party or by which it is bound; or (iii) result in the creation or imposition of any lien on any property, asset or revenue of the Company or the suspension, forfeiture, or nonrenewal of any material permit, license or authorization applicable to the Company, its business or operations.

Issuing the SAFE Cap is Kool and the Gang! The startup has no issue in issuing the SAFE Cap to investors.

(d)  No consents or approvals are required in connection with the performance of this Safe, other than: (i) the Company’s corporate approvals; (ii) any qualifications or filings under applicable securities laws; and (iii) necessary corporate approvals for the authorization of Capital Stock issuable pursuant to Section 1.

The startup doesn’t need to get any special approval to issue this SAFE Cap .

(e)  To its knowledge, the Company owns or possesses (or can obtain on commercially reasonable terms) sufficient legal rights to all patents, trademarks, service marks, trade names, copyrights, trade secrets, licenses, information, processes and other intellectual property rights necessary for its business as now conducted and as currently proposed to be conducted, without any conflict with, or infringement of the rights of, others.

Your startup doesn’t have any major IP issues. You aren’t going to create legal issues.

  1. Investor Representations

Investors assure everything is true.

(a)  The Investor has full legal capacity, power and authority to execute and deliver this Safe and to perform its obligations hereunder. This Safe constitutes valid and binding obligation of the Investor, enforceable in accordance with its terms, except as limited by bankruptcy, insolvency or other laws of general application relating to or affecting the enforcement of creditors’ rights generally and general principles of equity.

Investors are allowed to invest. They are allowed to sign for things.

(b)  The Investor is an accredited investor as such term is defined in Rule 501 of Regulation D under the Securities Act, and acknowledges and agrees that if not an accredited investor at the time of an Equity Financing, the Company may void this Safe and return the Purchase Amount. The Investor has been advised that this Safe and the underlying securities have not been registered under the Securities Act, or any state securities laws and, therefore, cannot be resold unless they are registered under the Securities Act and applicable state securities laws or unless an exemption from such registration requirements is available. The Investor is purchasing this Safe and the securities to be acquired by the Investor hereunder for its own account for investment, not as a nominee or agent, and not with a view to, or for resale in connection with, the distribution thereof, and the Investor has no present intention of selling, granting any participation in, or otherwise distributing the same. The Investor has such knowledge and experience in financial and business matters that the Investor is capable of evaluating the merits and risks of such investment, is able to incur a complete loss of such investment without impairing the Investor’s financial condition and is able to bear the economic risk of such investment for an indefinite period of time.

This is a typical American thing to make sure that investors are rich and not dumb. An accredited investor is someone who is rich enough to lose money.

  • Net worth of over $1 million (excluding house)
  • Income exceeds $200k for the last two years, or
  • Joint annual income with wife is larger than $300k for the last two years.
  1. Miscellaneous

(a)Any provision of this Safe may be amended, waived or modified by written consent of the Company and either (i) the Investor or (ii) the majority-in-interest of all then-outstanding Safes with the same “Post-Money Valuation Cap” and “Discount Rate” as this Safe (and Safes lacking one or both of such terms will be considered to be the same with respect to such term(s)), provided that with respect to clause (ii): (A) the Purchase Amount may not be amended, waived or modified in this manner, (B) the consent of the Investor and each holder of such Safes must be solicited (even if not obtained), and (C) such amendment, waiver or modification treats all such holders in the same manner. “Majority-in-interest” refers to the holders of the applicable group of Safes whose Safes have a total Purchase Amount greater than 50% of the total Purchase Amount of all of such applicable group of Safes.

Terms can be changed, but you can’t change the terms of the SAFE Cap with an email at 5am after a party. You need the majority of investors to change terms, which is more than 50% of the investors.

(b)  Any notice required or permitted by this Safe will be deemed sufficient when delivered personally or by overnight courier or sent by email to the relevant address listed on the signature page, or 48 hours after being deposited in the U.S. mail as certified or registered mail with postage prepaid, addressed to the party to be notified at such party’s address listed on the signature page, as subsequently modified by written notice.

You can send important notices by email or even snail mail.

(c)  The Investor is not entitled, as a holder of this Safe, to vote or be deemed a holder of Capital Stock for any purpose other than tax purposes, nor will anything in this Safe be construed to confer on the Investor, as such, any rights of a Company stockholder or rights to vote for the election of directors or on any matter submitted to Company stockholders, or to give or withhold consent to any corporate action or to receive notice of meetings, until shares have been issued on the terms described in Section 1.  However, if the Company pays a dividend on outstanding shares of Common Stock (that is not payable in shares of Common Stock) while this Safe is outstanding, the Company will pay the Dividend Amount to the Investor at the same time.

If you invested in a SAFE Cap, then you don’t have rights as a shareholder until you convert into shares.

(d)  Neither this Safe nor the rights in this Safe are transferable or assignable, by operation of law or otherwise, by either party without the prior written consent of the other; provided, however, that this Safe and/or its rights may be assigned without the Company’s consent by the Investor to any other entity who directly or indirectly, controls, is controlled by or is under common control with the Investor, including, without limitation, any general partner, managing member, officer or director of the Investor, or any venture capital fund now or hereafter existing which is controlled by one or more general partners or managing members of, or shares the same management company with, the Investor; and provided, further, that the Company may assign this Safe in whole, without the consent of the Investor, in connection with a reincorporation to change the Company’s domicile.

If you invest in a SAFE you can’t sell it to someone else. As a startup, you can’t sell the SAFE to someone else either.

(e)  In the event any one or more of the provisions of this Safe is for any reason held to be invalid, illegal or unenforceable, in whole or in part or in any respect, or in the event that any one or more of the provisions of this Safe operate or would prospectively operate to invalidate this Safe, then and in any such event, such provision(s) only will be deemed null and void and will not affect any other provision of this Safe and the remaining provisions of this Safe will remain operative and in full force and effect and will not be affected, prejudiced, or disturbed thereby.

This is about ‘severability’. If any clause doesn’t stand up, it doesn’t make the whole agreement pointless. This is standard lawyer stuff.

(f)  All rights and obligations hereunder will be governed by the laws of the State of [Governing Law Jurisdiction], without regard to the conflicts of law provisions of such jurisdiction.

What state in the US governs the SAFE Cap? You normally enter input the state of your main office (e.g Delaware). This is a “choice of law” clause, not a “choice of jurisdiction”.

In reality, this means that you can be taken to court in any state, but the laws that apply are the state you are incorporated. Not where the court is held.

(g)  The parties acknowledge and agree that for United States federal and state income tax purposes this Safe is, and at all times has been, intended to be characterized as stock, and more particularly as common stock for purposes of Sections 304, 305, 306, 354, 368, 1036 and 1202 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.  Accordingly, the parties agree to treat this Safe consistent with the foregoing intent for all United States federal and state income tax purposes (including, without limitation, on their respective tax returns or other informational statements).

This is a tax section. It says it is an equity not debt instrument for the purposes of tax.

Signing area

(Signature page follows)

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have caused this Safe to be duly executed and delivered.

[COMPANY]

By:

[name] [title]

Address:

Email:

INVESTOR:

By:

Name:

Title:

Address:

Email:

You and the SAFE Cap investor put in your details. Easy, duh.

Conclusion on the SAFE Cap

Hope you know what is in the document. If you are a lawyer and have something to add, let me know so I can update you! I’m not a lawyer and this is not legal advice.

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