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Seattle’s Boundless secured $7.8 million Series A to grow its marriage‑green‑card and citizenship tools, aiming to become the one‑stop shop for 2 million
Boundless Immigration announced a $7.8 million Series A round led by Foundry Group, bringing its total funding to $11.3 million and fueling plans to broaden its product suite for family‑based immigration【1】.
The Seattle‑based startup, founded in 2017 by Doug Rand, Serdar Sutay, and Xiao Wang, already processes more marriage‑based green‑card applications each month than any law firm or entity, according to CEO Wang【1】. Its two current offerings let users complete a marriage‑green‑card filing for a flat $750 fee or pursue naturalization for $395, with the company handling questionnaire collection, auto‑filled forms, and attorney review【3】. Since launch, nearly 1,500 customers have used the service, which the company claims boasts a 100 percent approval rate【1】.
Wang says the fresh capital will fund new products and expand the 28‑person team, with the goal of becoming “the one‑stop shop for all family‑based immigration” and serving the roughly two million people who navigate the family‑based system each year【1】【3】. The timing is notable: recent policy shifts have lengthened citizenship wait times, doubled in two years, and tightened green‑card eligibility, creating heightened demand for streamlined, affordable assistance【1】.
Boundless’s growth follows earlier milestones, including a 2020 $7.5 million round that financed the acquisition of RapidVisa and a 2021 $25 million raise to broaden services【2】. While the company cannot accelerate government processing, it aims to reduce errors and speed applicant preparation, positioning itself as a tech‑driven alternative to traditional legal firms【1】.
If the startup can maintain its approval record while scaling, it could reshape how millions of immigrants access legal pathways, but its reliance on flat‑fee pricing and attorney vetting leaves open how it will handle rising case complexity and potential regulatory changes.
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It helps immigrants apply for marriage-based green cards and U.S. citizenship by connecting them with attorneys and assisting with the online application process.
Publishers alleged that the platform violated copyright laws by creating unauthorized, free 'shadow-versions' of their copyrighted textbooks.
The company charges a flat rate of $750 for marriage green card services and $395 for naturalization services.
AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 4 outlets · Jun 14, 2026 · How we report