Regulations slow growth but reward patient founders: Razorpay’s Harshil Mathur at YC Startup School

Regulations slow growth but reward patient founders: Razorpay’s Harshil Mathur at YC Startup School



Building in a regulated space has its own advantages because not all founders will have the patience to navigate regulatory hurdles, said Harshil Mathur, chief executive officer of Razorpay, at the Y Combinator Startup School event in Bengaluru.

Addressing a crowd of 2,500 at the first such YC event in India, Mathur told YC partner Jon Xu in a fireside chat that when he started the company, he had underestimated the potential size of the Indian payments market and that Razorpay has since surpassed all his initial business projections in the last ten years.

“In my application to YC in 2014–15, we had said that India is a $60 billion payments market. Today, Razorpay alone does $180 billion in payments volume,” Mathur said.

Razorpay was the first Indian fintech startup to be funded by YC. The company, founded by Mathur and Shashank Kumar in 2014, offers digital payment services to merchants operating across online, offline, and cross-border channels. It has been licensed by the central bank to operate as a payment aggregator.

Talking about the early days of Razorpay around 2014–15, Mathur said he felt the need to build a digital payments network after experiencing firsthand the challenges of accepting payments digitally.

“I knew there was a problem around payments and was wondering why others were not solving it. It was such that accepting payments in cash was easier,” he said.