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Venture Capital Compliance: Keeping a Vc Fund Exempt and Defensible



Venture capital compliance begins with a threshold question: does the fund actually qualify as a venture capital fund under SEC rules, or is it simply a private fund investing in startups?

The answer drives everything else, from adviser registration to fundraising, investor eligibility, conflicts, and portfolio-company information controls.

Whether you are launching a first fund, raising capital, or building a compliance program, understanding venture capital compliance helps you rely on the right exemptions without triggering enforcement risk. This guide covers adviser exemptions, the VC fund definition, fund documents and Regulation D fundraising, investor eligibility, conflicts, and MNPI, valuation, and portfolio-company oversight.

Contents


1. Adviser Exemptions and the Venture Capital Fund Definition


Venture capital compliance starts with two linked questions: whether the manager must register as an investment adviser, and whether the fund meets the SEC's definition of a venture capital fund. Calling a fund "VC" does not by itself qualify it. The details of the definition control.

Getting this threshold right determines the entire compliance framework that follows. It is where experienced SEC compliance analysis matters most.



Does a Vc Fund Adviser Need to Register with the Sec?


Often no, because an adviser that solely advises venture capital funds may qualify for an exemption from SEC registration under the Investment Advisers Act. A separate private fund adviser exemption may apply to an adviser with less than $150 million in private fund assets under management in the United States [confirm: current threshold under Advisers Act Section 203(m) and Rule 203(m)-1].

Even exempt advisers are not unregulated. Many must file as exempt reporting advisers (ERAs), submitting part of Form ADV, and remain subject to recordkeeping, antifraud rules, and possible state requirements. So the realistic question is not "registered or not," but which exemption applies and what obligations still attach, an area within investment management regulation.



What Qualifies As a Venture Capital Fund?


A venture capital fund must meet specific SEC criteria, not just invest in startups. According to the SEC's venture capital fund rule (17 C.F.R. Section 275.203(l)-1), the fund generally must pursue a venture capital strategy, hold mostly qualifying investments in qualifying portfolio companies, limit non-qualifying assets, restrict leverage, and avoid offering investors ordinary redemption rights.

Under that rule, the fund's non-qualifying assets are generally capped at no more than 20 percent of committed capital, and borrowing is limited to roughly 15 percent of capital and generally to short-term borrowing of no more than 120 days [confirm: current 20% basket, 15% leverage, and 120-day limits under Rule 203(l)-1]. A fund that drifts outside these limits, for example by using significant leverage or holding too many non-qualifying assets, may lose the venture capital adviser exemption, so fund terms should be monitored over the fund's life, not just at launch.



2. Fund Documents, Fundraising, and Investor Eligibility


Once the fund and adviser status are set, the next layer is launching and raising capital lawfully: the fund's core documents, how interests are offered, who can invest, and how the fund avoids being treated as a registered investment company. These rules are technical and easy to trip over. A single misstep can taint an offering.

Fund interests are securities, so the offering must fit a registration exemption. Investor type and count drive the structure.



What Documents and Regulation D Rules Apply to a Vc Raise?


A VC fund launch requires a coordinated document package and a compliant private offering. The documents usually include a limited partnership agreement or operating agreement, a private placement memorandum (PPM), a subscription agreement and investor questionnaire, a Form ADV or ERA filing analysis, Form D, blue sky notices, a side letter tracker, and compliance policies.

The raise itself typically relies on Regulation D, using Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c):

  • Rule 506(b): allows up to 35 sophisticated non-accredited investors but bars general solicitation [confirm: 35-purchaser limit under Rule 506(b)].
  • Rule 506(c): permits public solicitation but requires all investors to be accredited, with verification.

Publicly discussing a raise, on a podcast, website, or social media, can break a Rule 506(b) offering unless the fund was structured for Rule 506(c). Under SEC Rule 503, Form D is generally filed within 15 days after the first sale of securities [confirm: 15-day Form D deadline under Rule 503], and state blue sky notice filings should be coordinated with the fund's closing schedule, along with "bad actor" checks, consistent with securities regulations.



Who Can Invest, and Should a Fund Use Section 3(C)(1) or 3(C)(7)?


Investor eligibility and fund structure are set by both Regulation D and the Investment Company Act. Most VC funds rely on Section 3(c)(1), which limits the number of beneficial owners, or Section 3(c)(7), which requires all investors to be qualified purchasers.

Under Section 3(c)(1), a fund is generally limited to 100 beneficial owners, but a "qualifying venture capital fund" may have up to 250 beneficial owners [confirm: 100-owner limit and 250-owner qualifying VC fund cap under the Investment Company Act]. The right structure depends on the investor base:

StructureInvestor Requirement
Rule 506(b)Accredited, plus up to 35 sophisticated non-accredited
Rule 506(c)All accredited, with verification
Section 3(c)(1)Up to 100 beneficial owners (250 for a qualifying VC fund)
Section 3(c)(7)Qualified purchasers only

Counting beneficial owners correctly, including through SPVs and fund-of-funds investors, is a frequent compliance issue. Fundraising materials should also be reviewed under the SEC Marketing Rule, especially performance claims, track record presentation, portfolio-company logos, hypothetical returns, testimonials, endorsements, and statements about unrealized valuations.



3. Conflicts, Disclosures, and Portfolio Controls


Beyond filings, the issues that most often lead to disputes or examinations are conflicts of interest and the handling of information from portfolio companies. These go to the heart of the adviser's duty to investors. They deserve documented policies, not ad hoc judgment.

An adviser, even an exempt one, is subject to antifraud rules. What the GP promised limited partners must match how the fund actually operates.



How Should a Vc Fund Handle Conflicts, Side Letters, and Fees?


A VC fund should identify, disclose, and consistently administer conflicts of interest, because the antifraud provisions of Investment Advisers Act Section 206 apply even to exempt advisers. Common conflict areas include deal and follow-on allocation across funds and SPVs, GP co-investment, warehousing, related-party transactions, and expense allocation.

Side letters, which give particular investors preferential terms such as fee discounts, co-investment, or most-favored-nation (MFN) rights, are common but should be tracked, disclosed, and administered carefully. Valuation policy and fund expenses should also be clearly disclosed and applied, since inconsistent marks or expense practices are frequent examination topics.

If the fund solicits public pension plans or government-related investors, the adviser should also review pay-to-play restrictions, placement-agent rules, and political-contribution policies, and clear documentation remains the foundation of a defensible compliance program.



What Portfolio Company and Information Controls Do Vc Funds Need?


VC funds with board seats or board observer rights need controls for material nonpublic information (MNPI). Access to a portfolio company's confidential information can create insider-trading and information-sharing risks, especially when a portfolio company is or becomes public.

Portfolio-company information controls should cover board materials, data rooms, investor updates, cybersecurity practices, restricted lists, personal trading, and information received through board seats or observer rights, drawing on insider trading controls.

Anti-money-laundering and sanctions screening of investors, including source-of-funds review and checks on foreign limited partners and beneficial owners, is also increasingly important, supported by AML compliance procedures.

Funds accepting pension or benefit-plan investors should additionally monitor ERISA plan-asset issues and any LPA limits designed to prevent the fund's assets from being treated as plan assets.



4. Examinations, Recent Rule Changes, and Getting Help


The compliance picture is not static: the SEC examines advisers, and the rules themselves shift. Recent litigation has changed what applies to private fund advisers, so managers should confirm current obligations rather than rely on older guidance. Staying current is part of compliance.

Preparation for scrutiny and awareness of change go together. Both protect the fund and its manager.



What about Sec Exams and the 2023 Private Fund Adviser Rules?


The SEC can examine advisers, including exempt reporting advisers in some respects, focusing on Form ADV accuracy, marketing, conflicts, valuation, and recordkeeping. Strong policies and organized records are the best preparation for any inquiry or document request.

Importantly, the SEC's 2023 private fund adviser rules were vacated by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in 2024, so those specific rules are not in effect [confirm: Fifth Circuit vacatur and that the SEC did not obtain further review].

Managers should confirm current obligations against existing adviser, antifraud, fund-document, and state-law duties rather than assume the vacated rules apply, and should watch for new rulemaking. Investment adviser AML obligations have also expanded, but coverage depends on adviser status, exemptions, effective dates, and current FinCEN guidance, so this should be confirmed rather than assumed.



When Should a Venture Capital Compliance Lawyer Review the Fund?


A venture capital compliance lawyer should be involved before fund launch, before the first closing, before any public fundraising, and whenever a side letter, conflict, or SEC or state inquiry arises. Early review confirms the exemption, structures the offering and documents, and builds the compliance and MNPI policies the fund needs.

Counsel can test the venture capital fund definition, structure the Regulation D offering and investor onboarding, document conflicts and side letters, and prepare for examinations, drawing on private investment funds experience. Because an exemption does not remove antifraud, disclosure, and information-control duties, getting advice before launch and before each raise is far safer than fixing problems after an investor complaint or SEC inquiry.



5. Venture Capital Compliance Questions Answered for Fund Managers


Fund managers and sponsors often have practical questions about exemptions, fundraising, and investor rules. These quick answers cover registration, the VC fund definition, solicitation, investors, and side letters.



What Is Venture Capital Compliance?


Venture capital compliance is the set of securities and investment adviser requirements that govern how a VC fund is structured, raised, operated, and reported. It covers adviser registration or exemption, the SEC's venture capital fund definition, Regulation D fundraising, investor eligibility, conflicts of interest, and portfolio-company information controls.



Does a Venture Capital Adviser Have to Register with the Sec?


Often not, because an adviser that solely advises venture capital funds may qualify for an exemption, and a separate exemption may apply below roughly $150 million in U.S. .rivate fund assets under management. However, many exempt advisers must still file as exempt reporting advisers on Form ADV and remain subject to recordkeeping, antifraud, and possible state rules.



Does a Venture Capital Adviser Have to Register with the Sec?


Often not, because an adviser that solely advises venture capital funds may qualify for an exemption, and a separate exemption may apply below roughly $150 million in U.S. .rivate fund assets under management. However, many exempt advisers must still file as exempt reporting advisers on Form ADV and remain subject to recordkeeping, antifraud, and possible state rules.



Can a Vc Fund Publicly Advertise Its Fundraising?


Only if it is structured for it. A Rule 506(b) offering bars general solicitation, so public posts about the raise can jeopardize it. A Rule 506(c) offering allows advertising but requires that every investor be accredited and that the fund take reasonable steps to verify accredited status, so the offering type must be chosen deliberately.



Can a Vc Fund Accept Non-Accredited Investors?


Rarely, and only within strict limits. Under Rule 506(b), a fund may include up to 35 sophisticated non-accredited investors, but a Rule 506(c) offering requires all investors to be accredited. Investment Company Act limits on beneficial owners or qualified purchasers also constrain who can invest, so eligibility should be confirmed before accepting subscriptions.



How Many Investors Can a Venture Capital Fund Have?


It depends on the exemption. Under Section 3(c)(1), a fund is generally limited to 100 beneficial owners, though a qualifying venture capital fund may have up to 250. A Section 3(c)(7) fund can have more investors but only qualified purchasers. Rule 506(b) also caps non-accredited investors at 35.



Are Side Letters Allowed in Venture Capital Funds?


Yes, side letters are common, but they must be handled carefully. They give specific investors preferential terms, such as fee breaks, co-investment, or most-favored-nation rights, and should be tracked, disclosed as appropriate, and administered consistently. Poorly managed side letters can create conflicts and disclosure problems under the antifraud rules.


29 Jan, 2026


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