← State of Embedded Finance 2026

Jobber

Can a vertical SaaS platform for home service pros become the financial and operational OS that replaces traditional banking, lending, and accounting relationships for blue-collar small businesses?

Founded2011
HQEdmonton, Alberta, Canada
FoundersSam Pillar, Forrest Zeisler
Total raised$183.5M+
Latest roundSeries D, 2021
IndustryVertical SaaS / Home Services
The story

Founded in 2011 as a scheduling and operations platform for small home service businesses, Jobber progressively embedded financial services into its workflow software. The company launched Jobber Payments (Stripe-powered) to capture payment processing revenue, then added Stripe Capital financing and instant payouts as a cash-flow tool for its SMB customers. By 2025, Jobber migrated its lending product (Jobber Capital) to Parafin — a purpose-built embedded lending orchestrator — and expanded into Canada, signalling a deliberate shift toward becoming the financial operating system for the home service vertical.

Last 12 months
2025-12
2025-10
Product timeline
2011
Founded as a field service management platform for home service businesses (scheduling, quoting, invoicing).· pivot
2019
Launched Jobber Payments, a fully integrated payment processing platform powered by Stripe.· banking
2021
Raised $100M Series D led by General Atlantic; platform reaches 200,000+ users across 60 countries.· ipo
2022
Expanded partnership with Stripe to offer Stripe Capital financing and instant payouts via Visa Direct to North American customers.· lending
2023
Launched Jobber Money, a business spend account with physical branded debit cards for US Jobber Payments users, backed by Stripe Treasury.· banking
2025
Expanded Jobber Capital lending product to Canadian home service pros via deepened Parafin partnership, replacing Stripe Capital.· lending
The stack
Payments / PSP
StripeSquareAuthorize.net
Banking / BaaS
Stripe Treasury
Card issuing
Stripe Issuing
Lending
ParafinJobber Capital
Payroll
Gusto
Open banking
Plaid
Accounting
QuickBooks OnlineXero
Accounting gap: minor