Nearly three-quarters of financial technology startups fail within their first three years due to preventable regulatory compliance issues, according to a new industry report.
The research study, released by Los Angeles-based Hare Strategy Group, analyzed five years of data from over 400 fintech ventures and identified regulatory navigation “as the primary factor determining success or failure in the rapidly growing sector.”
Jeremy Hare, principal researcher and founder of the consulting firm that conducted the study said:
“What’s striking about the data is how technical excellence alone doesn’t guarantee market success. The findings clearly show that early regulatory planning is as critical as product development.”
The analysis, titled “Bridging the Compliance Gap: Critical Strategies for Fintech Success in 2025,” revealed several key insights for industry stakeholders:
- Regulatory preparation in pre-seed stage increased survival rates by 64%
Banking partnership integration issues caused 42% of failures among technically viable products - Cross-border compliance challenges were the primary failure point for 58% of international expansion attempts
- Startups with regulatory experts on their founding teams secured funding 2.8 times faster than those without
The report emerges as fintech investment reached “$53 billion globally in 2024, despite ongoing concerns about regulatory uncertainty in the sector.”
Hare, who previously managed hedge fund investments, added:
“This isn’t just academic research—it’s designed to provide practical, implementable strategies. We’ve created actionable frameworks specifically for fintech founders navigating their first regulatory hurdles.”
The research study reportedly includes a regulatory roadmap template and partnership development toolkit, available for industry professionals.
Hare Strategy Group, founded in 2023, specializes in helping companies identify and “navigate regulatory challenges in financial technology.”
The firm developed the report / research over “a six-month period, including interviews with founders, regulators, and venture capital firms active in the fintech ecosystem.”
Hare also mentioned:
“The timing of this research aligns with Q2 planning cycles when many fintech companies reassess their regulatory strategies. We’re seeing increased interest from venture firms who want portfolio companies to address these issues earlier in their development.”