Pintarnya, an Indonesia-based employment and financial-services platform founded in 2022, has successfully raised a $16.7 million Series A funding round led by Square Peg, with participation from Vertex Venture Southeast Asia & India and East Ventures. Targeting the largely informal and underserved portion of Indonesia’s workforce—about 59% of the 150 million-strong labor force—the startup uses AI-driven job matching to connect job seekers with full-time and gig opportunities and partners with asset-backed lenders to provide secured loans using collateral like gold or electronics. With over 10 million users and 40,000 employers currently on the platform, Pintarnya’s revenue has grown almost five-fold year-on-year, and the company expects to reach break-even by the end of this year. Looking ahead, Pintarnya plans to expand its platform capabilities, broaden financial offerings, and position itself as a go-to “super app” for blue-collar workers in Indonesia.
Sources: Deal Street Asia, Tech Crunch, Finsmes.com
Key Takeaways
– Major investor support: The Series A round was led by Square Peg, joined by existing backers Vertex Ventures Southeast Asia & India and East Ventures.
– Serving the underserved: The platform already reaches more than 10 million users and partners with asset-backed lenders to offer secured loans to blue-collar and informal workers.
– Growth trajectory: Revenue has increased nearly fivefold since launch, and Pintarnya is aiming to reach break-even by year’s end while planning to evolve into a super app for Indonesia’s workforce.
In-Depth
Pintarnya’s recent $16.7 million Series A funding round marks a conservative yet promising step toward transforming how blue-collar and informal workers in Indonesia access both employment and financial services. Founded just three years ago in 2022, Pintarnya combines AI-powered job matching with asset-backed lending—offering a practical solution to the twin challenges of job search and responsible borrowing in communities frequently overlooked by mainstream fintech, thanks in part to their lack of formal documentation and income stability. By partnering with lenders that accept collateral such as gold, electronics, or vehicles, Pintarnya provides credit where traditional banks often won’t tread.
Boasting over 10 million job-seeker users and 40,000 employers, the platform has rapidly demonstrated market fit. Its revenue surge—nearly fivefold year-on-year—is a conservative indicator of scalability and user trust. The expectation to reach break-even by year’s end suggests a disciplined growth path. The heavy-hitting backers in this round—Square Peg, Vertex Ventures, and East Ventures—signal confidence in the model and governance.
Looking ahead, Pintarnya isn’t just stopping at jobs and loans. The founders envision building a super app that supports workers at every step—matching them with gigs, enabling skill enhancement, then offering access to micro-savings, insurance or investment tools. For a nation where blue-collar workers form the backbone of the economy, Pintarnya’s methodical expansion may represent both practical compassion and business prudence—as long as execution remains measured and the focus stays on lifting financially underserved communities.

