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Established in 2019, Rivero is a fast-growing European company and a Visa Fintech Partner specializing in streamlining payment operations within the highly regulated payments industry. We focus on offering unique SaaS solutions for fraud recovery, dispute management, and payment scheme compliance.
Rivero has raised $7.0M across 1 funding round.
Rivero has raised $7.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Rivero has raised $7.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Rivero's investors include Thibault D'hondt, Endre Sagi, 20VC, 9Yards Capital, Kevin Hartz, Addition, Afore Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Buckley Ventures, Cedar Capital Group, Force Over Mass Capital, Index Ventures.
Rivero has raised $7.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $7.0M Series A in January 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1, 2024 | $7M Series A | Thibault D'hondt, Endre Sagi | 20VC, 9Yards Capital, Kevin Hartz, Addition, Afore Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Buckley Ventures, Cedar Capital Group, Force Over Mass Capital, Index Ventures, Kaszek Ventures, Khosla Ventures, Latitud, Monashees, Nxtp Ventures, SciFi VC, Section 32, BIZ Stone, Karim Atiyeh, Martin Varsavsky, Philippe Teixeira DA Mota, William Hockey, Robert Kraal, Kraken Ventures, PostFinance, Seed X | Announced |
Rivero is a Switzerland-based fintech company founded in 2019 that builds SaaS platforms to automate and streamline payment operations for banks and card issuers[1][2][3]. Its flagship products, Kajo and Amiko, address key pain points in the regulated payments industry: Kajo ensures payment scheme compliance by minimizing risks and manual efforts for network licensees, while Amiko digitizes fraud recovery and dispute management, enabling efficient processes and self-service for customers[1][2][3][5]. Serving issuing banks, acquirers, and processors across Europe, Rivero tackles rising operational costs from outdated manual workflows, with over 20 partnerships secured in three years and recognition as the first Swiss fintech in Visa's Fintech Partner Connect program[3][5]. The company has raised $7M in Series A funding, signaling strong growth momentum in a market demanding digital efficiency[6].
Rivero was established in 2019 in Zurich, Switzerland, by co-founders including Thomas Müller (CEO), who brought expertise as former CISO of a major Swiss card issuer in security, product design, and engineering[1][4]. Joining him are Fatemeh Nikayin, with payments research and banking digitalization experience, and Stephan Wächter, offering a decade in payments product management and compliance[1]. The idea emerged from observing banks' struggles with escalating costs in fraud recovery, dispute management, and scheme compliance due to manual processes, prompting Müller to build initial product versions focused on automation and customer-centric innovation[4]. Early traction came quickly: within three years of go-to-market, Rivero partnered with over 20 financial institutions and earned Visa partnership status in 2022, validating its solutions amid industry fragmentation[3].
Rivero rides the wave of fintech digitization in payments, where regulatory pressures, rising fraud, and scheme updates demand automation amid a shift to real-time, customer-facing digital experiences[1][4][5]. Timing aligns with post-pandemic growth in card payments and PSD2/SCA mandates, favoring SaaS over legacy systems as banks face cost pressures from manual ops[3][4]. Market forces like Visa's ecosystem push and Europe's fragmented banking landscape amplify its edge, enabling issuers to retain control while scaling efficiently[3][5]. By influencing 20+ institutions, Rivero accelerates industry-wide adoption of AI-driven compliance and disputes, reducing ecosystem-wide friction and enhancing consumer trust[3][5].
Rivero's $7M Series A from 6 Degrees Capital, Inference Partners, and payments insiders positions it for European expansion and product enhancements like deeper AI integration[6]. Upcoming trends—AI fraud detection, instant payments, and stricter schemes—will propel demand, potentially doubling partnerships as banks prioritize cost efficiency[3][5][6]. Its influence may evolve from niche innovator to standard-setter, especially via Visa ties, tying back to its core mission of simplifying payments to empower banks and protect consumers[1][3].