13 December 2016Insurance

Insurtech start-up Digital Fineprint lands $400k investment

Insurtech start-up Digital Fineprint has raised $400k seed investment from Eos Venture Partners and a group of angel investors.

Investors participating included the co-head of the financial institutions group at JP Morgan, Carl Bauer, Merrill Lynch vice president Stephan Apel, as well as the vice president at Twitter and Google Shailesh Rao.

Oxford start-up Digital Fineprint, which is now headquartered in London, tied up with Hiscox, Allianz and four other major insurers in the recent past.

Erik Abrahamsson, the founder of Digital Fineprint, said: “After we partnered with Allianz and began helping consumers find the right insurance policy using social media data, we turned to Eos Venture Partners to help with our fundraising.

“It has been an exhilarating journey, and we are all grateful and excited for the hard work Sam Evans and his team has put in.”

Sam Evans from Eos Venture Partners has previously invested in a number of Insurtech startups including RightIndem and Neos.

The investment fund has also partnered with StartupBootcamp Insurtech to provide early stage funding for promising insurtech startups.

Already registered?

Login to your account

To request a FREE 2-week trial subscription, please signup.
NOTE - this can take up to 48hrs to be approved.

Two Weeks Free Trial

For multi-user price options, or to check if your company has an existing subscription that we can add you to for FREE, please email Adrian Tapping at atapping@newtonmedia.co.uk


More on this story

Insurance
29 December 2025   From Gallagher’s $13.45bn blockbuster buy to Markel’s exit from global reinsurance, 2025 delivered surprises on both ends of the M&A spectrum. We take a closer look at the deals and retreats that shook the market.
Insurance
24 December 2025   From London to Bermuda, the market watched exits jolt the industry, teams reshuffle and others fall into place with far less fanfare.
Insurance
22 December 2025   Brokerage complaints spin tawdry tales to frame defections as low-rent theft & espionage.