Andreessen Horowitz has led a $21 million Series A round into Sphere, an AI-native tax compliance engine that ensures businesses stay on top of their cross-border operations.
Y Combinator and Felicis Ventures participated in the financing, which is for a product focused on companies that are scaling internationally from late-stage private through IPO.

Sphere is the brainchild of Nicholas Rudder, who launched the company in 2023 after pivoting an ed-tech marketplace to solve a pain he personally experienced: dealing with global tax complexity. The company’s system can be set up in less than 24 hours and integrates with major billing tools — it already caters to high-growth customers such as Lovable, Replit and ElevenLabs.
Why AI-Native Tax Compliance Is Booming for Global Firms
Digital businesses slam into a patchwork of moving rules: The United States has more than 11,000 sales tax jurisdictions; there are more than 70 countries with VAT or GST regimes, and they all have exemptions, thresholds and return schedules. The day Wayfair made its ruling empowering states to collect sales tax from online retailers, compliance became as much a data issue as it was a legal one.
Regulators are also accelerating change. The European Commission is implementing VAT in the Digital Age initiative with real-time reporting and e-invoicing. Countries such as India, Mexico and Brazil have shifted to continuous transaction controls which demand machine-paced validation. For finance teams, that can equal hundreds of filings and remittances a year in which manual spreadsheets just don’t work.
Indirect tax consistently ranks as a top operational risk for cross-border SaaS and marketplaces according to industry surveys conducted by global accounting firms. The promise of AI here is less about replacing accountants than to codify the rules, test for edge cases and spew out auditable reasoning at a throughput that traditional software struggles to match.
Inside Sphere’s Approach to AI-Driven Tax Compliance
At the heart of Sphere is an AI audit and review model that the company refers to as TRAM. It takes in statutes, rulings and agency guidance from multiple jurisdictions, besides generating determinations over whether a particular transaction is taxable and why, along with support you should cite. A team of human tax experts is supposed to confirm those outputs before they are pushed in real time to Mastercard’s own collection of tax levies and applied at checkout.
That split design is intentional: It’s how the firm keeps its real-time engine deterministic so that no AI hallucinations poof into existence at the moment of computation, but it nonetheless leverages machine learning upstream to keep rules up to date and human-readable. The company says it is directly integrated with over 100 taxing authorities, allowing businesses to register, receive confirmations, file returns and remit funds all without navigating away from the platform.

On the data side, Sphere plugs into billing stacks like Stripe and Campfire to extract past and present transactions, map exposure and trigger registrations when thresholds are reached. Sphere remarks that it is one of the few technology vendors to have native integrations with Stripe’s Billing and Checkout, adding a complementary offering alongside Stripe Tax for customers looking for full lifecycle compliance from registration all the way through remittance.
A Crowded Market With Distinct Points of Difference
The tax automation market has some established players — like Avalara, and newer SaaS invaders, like Anrok — as well as big payments platforms that include embedded tax functions. Where Sphere hopes to differentiate is by taking end-to-end responsibility, without outsourcing the pain of navigating complex geographies to third-party consultants — a major grievance raised by multinationals that are looking for one system of record for filings and payments everywhere in the world.
For high-growth software companies — Sphere’s sweet spot from Series B through pre-IPO — the calculus is about auditability and speed. CFOs expect a defensible trail on every decision, turnkey entry into new markets and the ability to layer tax rules into product roadmaps without delaying launches. Human-in-the-loop AI, which leverages real authorities and their native connections, directly addresses them.
How the New Capital Gets Put to Work Across Sphere
Sphere intends to add more integrations with local tax authorities, further develop its AI and rules engineering teams, and establish an international sales organization. That’s in line with the direction compliance is going: closer to the rails, more machine-checked, and increasingly continuous instead of batch-based. Compliance- and fintech-experienced investors — a16z, YC, Felicis and more besides — are backing the idea that the next generation of tax infrastructure will be built around those principles rather than as a quarterly project.
What to Watch Next for Sphere’s Global Tax Platform
The key tests for Sphere will be the breadth of coverage, as well as error rates under review — and its resiliency in the face of changing rules in jurisdictions. You can also expect security and controls to be under the microscope, with enterprise buyers often requiring certifications such as SOC 2 and ISO 27001 along with strong segregation of duties for filings and payments.
If Sphere can keep up with changes to rules, regulations and laws while keeping the human element central to its offering, it may be a default choice for global finance teams — especially those expanding into new territories where one misclassified transaction or missed registration could carry an untenable cost. With new funding and high-profile early customers, the company finally has the runway to prove that AI and tax can coexist at enterprise scale.
