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Founded in 2011 by Hiroki Takeuchi, Tom Blomfield, and Matt Robinson, the company originally started under the name Groupay, with a vision to facilitate group payments more easily. As one of the first British teams to graduate from the Y Combinator accelerator programme, the founders realised the broader potential of simplifying recurring payments using Direct Debit, pivoted and rebranded the company as GoCardless.

Returning to London, the founders needed desk space and were quickly pointed in the direction of White Bear Yard, London’s first tech co-working space, managed by the Passion team as a separate project to provide a home for many of their investments as well as other interesting start-ups. Passion Capital became one of the company’s earliest and most important investors with Passion partner Robert Dighero playing a key role in backing the company during this formative stage. His experience in scaling early stage companies provided invaluable guidance during GoCardless’s early development and Passion Capital’s belief in the founding team helped give the startup early credibility in the UK tech ecosystem.

After launching publicly, GoCardless quickly found product-market fit among UK SMEs looking for a simple way to accept Direct Debit payments. The company refined its API, enabling developers and platforms to integrate recurring payments easily. Over time, it expanded its capabilities to serve larger enterprises and added integrations with accounting software like Xero and QuickBooks.

Over the next few years first Tom (later to co-found Monzo) and then Matt (later to co-found Nested) moved on, leaving Hiroki to continue as CEO, driving GoCardless’s product-led growth and international expansion. As a sign of the strong working relationships and founder-investor loyalty that had developed, Passion became the first investor in both Monzo and Nested as each company started on its respective journey.

Meanwhile GoCardless broadened its reach beyond the UK to Europe, Australia, and North America. It attracted significant later-stage investment from leading firms such as Google Ventures (GV) and Bain Capital. Throughout this journey, early investors like Passion Capital continued to support the company and Passion continued to invest after its fund reached maximum capacity by establishing an SPV to inject further funds into the business.

In more recent years, GoCardless expanded into open banking and more sophisticated payment intelligence tools. All the time, its strong API and developer-first approach positioned it as a leading alternative to card-based recurring billing systems.