Uspacy Secures €420K Pre-Seed to Scale Its All-in-One Platform for SMEs

The Kyiv-based startup has drawn investor and grant backing to strengthen its product and marketing in Ukraine and Poland, while preparing for international expansion.

Uspacy Secures €420K Pre-Seed to Scale Its All-in-One Platform for SMEs
Uspacy co-founders Spartak Polishchuk, Dmytro Suslov, Kyrylo Melnychuk, and Volodymyr Pimakhov.

KYIV, Ukraine — 14 August 2025

Ukrainian SaaS startup Uspacy has closed a €420,000 pre-seed funding round to expand its all-in-one business management platform for small and medium-sized enterprises.

The round included €250,000 in investments from the Estonian fund Startup Wise Guys and several Ukrainian angel investors, alongside more than €170,000 in grants from Google for Startups, Seeds of Bravery, Glovo Startup Lab, and the Ukrainian Startup Fund with support from the Ukraine-Moldova American Enterprise Fund (UMAEF). At closing, Uspacy was valued at €5 million.

Founded in May 2022 in Kyiv by Dmytro Suslov, Kyrylo Melnychuk, Spartak Polishchuk, and Volodymyr Pimakhov, Uspacy combines CRM, task and project management, corporate chat, analytics, marketing, and process automation in a single platform. The service also supports integrations with Ukrainian marketplaces, content management systems, delivery and payment services, and features a mobile app and a social-media-style news feed. The first version of the product was launched in February 2023, developed without external funding as the team validated market needs and built its partner network.

“We are building Uspacy for teams that seek streamlined processes, transparency, and productivity,” said Dmytro Suslov, Uspacy’s co-founder and CEO. “Our focus is on small and medium-sized businesses that already recognize the need to organize their workflows. We are confident that we can offer them more than standalone corporate systems and global products that are not tailored to local markets.”

When asked how Uspacy secured backing in today’s challenging venture market, Suslov said that while there were many reasons investors could have declined, the decisive factor was “faith in the founding team and the desire to be part of our future success.” He added that receiving external funding expands the toolkit, enabling more resources for customer acquisition and product growth.

The company plans to use the new capital to accelerate product development and expand its marketing efforts, particularly in Ukraine and Poland. Uspacy’s leadership has also set its sights on broader international growth, with Brazil among its early target markets.

Uspacy is already used by both private companies and government institutions. The startup’s participation in the Glovo Startup Lab brought a €10,000 grant and an internship at Glovo’s headquarters in Barcelona.

Startup Wise Guys, which led the round, is an Estonian accelerator and venture fund that has invested in more than 350 startups since 2012, achieving 13 successful exits. Its portfolio includes Ukrainian defense tech startup Frontline as well as fintech companies across Europe and Africa.