Most founders start by tracking equity on the back of a napkin.
And that’s fine—until someone asks, “what’s your cap table look like?” Or you realize you don’t know what percentage of the company each founder owns anymore.
<strong>What Is a Cap Table, Really?</strong>
A capitalization table is a spreadsheet showing who owns what % of the company. It includes:
Founder equity splits
Vesting schedules
Employees/advisors (if they have stock or options)
Investors (if you’ve raised)
<strong>Do You Need One at Day 1?</strong>
Not really. If it’s just you and one co-founder with a 50/50 split and no one else has any stake, you don’t need a formal cap table yet.
But you do need a written agreement.
A founder agreement (like CoFounda’s Blueprint) is more urgent than a cap table because it prevents ambiguity and conflict.
<strong>When a Cap Table Becomes Essential</strong>
Once any of the following happen:
You have more than 2 people with equity
You introduce vesting schedules
You bring on advisors or early employees with stock
You take external funding (angel, pre-seed, etc.)
…then you need a real cap table.
<strong>Tools You Can Use</strong>
Google Sheets (for early simplicity)
Carta, Pulley, or Capshare (when you scale)
CoFounda tracks ownership during co-founder formation and gives you clarity before you even raise
<strong>The Bottom Line</strong>
You don’t need a fancy cap table on Day 1—but you do need clarity.
A clear, written, vested founder agreement > a premature cap table.
Once your team or funding structure gets more complex, formalize it with the right tools.