Cred now has the backing of Meta, but it’s at a significantly depressed valuation to its valuation from four years ago.
The company has confirmed it will raise ₹8,550 crore (~$900 million) in its Series H funding round led by Meta, with the investment structured as a mix of primary and secondary share purchases. The deal gives Cred a post-money valuation of ₹43,239 crore (~$4.5 billion) and a pre-money valuation of ₹38,819 crore (~$4.03 billion). Meta joins as a minority investor and, notably, will not receive access to Cred’s customer data.

The $4.5 billion post-money figure is a recovery from Cred’s $3.5 billion valuation in mid-2025 — itself a 45% haircut from its 2022 peak — but still well short of the $6.4 billion Cred commanded in its Series F round led by Singapore’s GIC in June 2022. That peak came off an extraordinary run: Cred had grown its valuation from $800 million to $6.4 billion in roughly 17 months, riding the wave of pandemic-era liquidity that swept through global venture markets. The correction that followed was equally sharp, and the Meta deal, while a major milestone, lands Cred well below where it stood three years ago.
What has changed in that time is the underlying business. Founder Kunal Shah on Monday described Cred as a profitable company generating approximately ₹3,200 crore (~$325 million) in annual revenue — a far cry from the company that was spending ₹7 to earn every rupee of revenue as recently as FY21. Cred now serves 1.7 crore (17 million) members monthly, processes over 40% of credit card bill payments in India, and has built a lending book of ₹24,000 crore (~$2.5 billion) in managed AUM for leading financial institutions. Its product portfolio spans payments, lending, insurance, wealth management, and lifestyle services.
The funding will go toward accelerating growth, strengthening organizational capabilities, and expanding Cred’s leadership across existing and new product categories — with an eye toward an eventual IPO. The board is already working on a longer-term leadership structure in preparation for that listing.
The most consequential part of the announcement, though, may be the leadership change. Shah is stepping down as CEO and joining Meta’s global leadership team to head WhatsApp worldwide, succeeding Will Cathcart who led the platform for seven years. Shah will retain his personal shareholding in Cred. Miten Sampat, who has headed strategy and finance at Cred since 2020, becomes interim CEO with immediate effect.
Shah’s departure is not entirely surprising given the context. Meta’s interest in Cred has always been about more than a financial bet on an Indian fintech — it’s about building infrastructure at the intersection of India’s payments ecosystem and Meta’s commerce ambitions. Bringing Shah into Meta’s leadership, specifically to run WhatsApp — where India is the platform’s largest market with over 500 million users — makes that logic explicit. As Mark Zuckerberg put it, Shah “brings the kind of builder mentality and global perspective that will serve him well in running the world’s biggest messaging app.”
For Shah, it closes one chapter of a journey that started with FreeCharge and, by his own account, began with $1 million of his personal capital in 2018. Cred has now raised over $900 million in total, conducted five ESOP buybacks, and delivered its first profitable quarter this year. Whether the valuation ever recovers to its 2022 highs will depend on how the business performs from here — and on whether the IPO markets, when the time comes, look at Cred’s financials rather than its funding history.