ResilienceVC Research
Investment Thesis
ResilienceVC is a Washington, DC-based seed-stage venture firm focused on embedded fintech startups that improve financial resilience for Americans while producing venture-scale returns. The firm's homepage states that it invests in seed-stage embedded fintech startups that build resilience for users and deliver returns for investors. ResilienceVC defines that resilience around three practical outcomes: reliable income generation and expense management, risk mitigation and recovery, and asset and wealth building. This is a sharper thesis than broad fintech or general financial inclusion. The firm is looking for financial products that are embedded into trusted workflows, channels, and moments of need, such as employer benefits, healthcare delivery, contractor sales, insurance claims, public benefit access, homeownership, and consumer decision points.
The portfolio and Fund I announcement reinforce that view. ResilienceVC says it supports models where fintech integrated into core services and channels drives business growth and helps consumers and small businesses thrive. Its public examples include Parento, which turns paid parental leave into an insurance-backed benefit for smaller employers; Coral, which embeds rebates and financing into HVAC and electrical contractor sales; Prado, which enables medically tailored meals to be prescribed and paid through HSA/FSA flows; Rosarium Health, which connects health plans, clinicians, and contractors around home modifications; and SUMA Wealth, which focuses on Latino financial education and wealth building. The common pattern is not just affordability or access, but financial value delivered at the point where users already face a cost, risk, or asset-building decision.
Stage Focus
ResilienceVC publicly describes itself as a seed-stage firm and says it wants to be among the first institutional partners for companies. The homepage says its goal is to lead or take significant positions in seed rounds, and the portfolio page says the firm supports companies with capital and expertise as they scale. Public financings line up with that positioning: ResilienceVC led Coral's $7.5 million seed round in March 2026, led Parento's $5.9 million Seed II in September 2025, and led Chaiz's $3.7 million seed round in August 2024. The best source-backed entry point is Seed, with selective pre-seed or Seed II/A relevance when the company is still early and tightly aligned with the embedded-fintech thesis.
Check Size
The strongest check-size anchor is the February 2025 Business Wire-distributed fund announcement, which said ResilienceVC expected to make 25 investments with an average initial investment of $1 million per company. Because public funding announcements do not disclose exact firm-level checks, the practical range should be treated conservatively as roughly $500,000 to $2 million. Larger round sizes may appear in the portfolio when ResilienceVC leads or participates alongside other seed and specialist investors.
Lead Tendency
ResilienceVC should be treated as lead-oriented. The firm's homepage says it aims to lead or take significant positions in seed rounds. Recent public financings also show lead behavior: Coral's seed round was led by ResilienceVC, Parento's Seed II was led by ResilienceVC, and Chaiz's seed round was led by ResilienceVC. The firm can also participate in aligned financings, as in Rosarium Health's 2026 round, but the dominant signal for matching is that ResilienceVC can anchor seed rounds when the company fits its embedded fintech and financial resilience lens.
Recent Activity
ResilienceVC has current activity in 2026. On May 13, 2026, UrbanGeekz reported that Rosarium Health raised $6 million with participation from ResilienceVC. On May 1, 2026, ResilienceVC's insights page highlighted its 2025 annual impact report, stating that the portfolio created over 40 million Resilience Dollars in 2025. On March 9, 2026, Coral announced a $7.5 million seed round led by ResilienceVC to expand its climate-fintech platform for HVAC and electrical upgrade rebates and financing. On September 9, 2025, Parento announced a $5.9 million Seed II led by ResilienceVC. In May 2025, Acorns announced the asset acquisition of EarlyBird, one of the companies listed in ResilienceVC's public portfolio.
Portfolio Highlights
The public portfolio includes Alice, Chaiz, Coral, EarlyBird, Foyer, GreenLyne, Mirza, OS Benefits, Parento, PartnerSlate, Prado, Rosarium Health, SUMA Wealth, and TugBoat. These companies cover financial resilience from several angles. Alice addresses pre-tax benefits for deskless and hourly workers. Chaiz helps consumers compare vehicle breakdown protection. Coral lowers upfront costs for energy-efficient upgrades through rebates and financing. Foyer helps first-time homebuyers save toward a home purchase. GreenLyne focuses on small-dollar, AI-underwritten home equity loans. Mirza helps workers and Medicaid members find and apply for childcare benefits. OS Benefits provides health insurance and wellness benefits for small hospitality businesses. TugBoat helps homeowners navigate property-insurance settlements after natural disasters. EarlyBird is a confirmed portfolio exit through Acorns' 2025 asset acquisition.
Team
ResilienceVC is led by co-founders and managing partners Vikas Raj and Tahira Dosani. The team page says Vikas has invested in over 70 fintech startups and previously led global investment work at Accion Venture Lab. It says Tahira has invested in over 75 early-stage fintech startups, including four unicorns, and was previously a Managing Director at Accion Venture Lab after roles at LeapFrog Investments, the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development, Roshan, and Bain. The investment team also includes associates Bryson Hearne and Maayan Teper. Advisors listed by the firm include Tom Blaisdell, Jacob Haar, and Paul Tregidgo.
Decision Process
ResilienceVC does not publish a formal investment committee process or decision timeline. Based on its seed-stage, co-founder-led model, founders should expect partner-led diligence around customer pain, embedded distribution, regulatory or policy complexity, unit economics, measurable financial impact, and the ability to produce venture-scale returns. Founder testimonials on the team page point to a hands-on style: pragmatic guidance, strategic and operational support, network access, and help from seed through Series A. No source says warm introductions are mandatory, so warm intro requirement should remain false or unknown rather than assumed.
Founder Preferences
The clearest founder preference comes from ResilienceVC's team page, which says it seeks founders with deep understanding of customers and customer needs, commitment to diverse and inclusive teams, and the ability to lead through startup turbulence. The strongest fit is a U.S.-oriented founder building fintech or fintech-adjacent infrastructure that improves resilience for consumers, workers, homeowners, patients, families, or small businesses through embedded distribution. Lower-fit areas include non-U.S.-only companies, financial products without a clear resilience outcome, pure consumer apps without durable embedded distribution, and crypto-first speculation without a practical income, expense, risk, or asset-building use case.
Geographic Focus
ResilienceVC is headquartered in Washington, DC and frames its mission around financial resilience across the United States. The Fund I announcement highlights the firm's Washington, DC location and its ability to leverage relationships with regulators and policymakers while maintaining ties to Silicon Valley and other innovation hubs nationwide. The portfolio and public messaging point to a U.S. focus rather than a global mandate.