Don't invest unless you’re prepared to lose all the money you invest. This is a high-risk investment and you are unlikely to be protected if something goes wrong. Take 2 mins to learn more.
Estimated reading time: 2 min
Due to the potential for losses, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) considers this investment to be high risk.
What are the key risks?
- You could lose all the money you invest
- If the business you invest in fails, you are likely to lose 100% of the money you invested. Most start-up businesses fail.
- You are unlikely to be protected if something goes wrong
- Protection from the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), in relation to claims against failed regulated firms, does not cover poor investment performance. Try the FSCS investment protection checker here.
- Protection from the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) does not cover poor investment performance. If you have a complaint against an FCA-regulated firm, FOS may be able to consider it. Learn more about FOS protection here.
- You won’t get your money back quickly
- Even if the business you invest in is successful, it may take several years to get your money back. You are unlikely to be able to sell your investment early.
- The most likely way to get your money back is if the business is bought by another business or lists its shares on an exchange such as the London Stock Exchange. These events are not common.
- If you are investing in a start-up business, you should not expect to get your money back through dividends. Start-up businesses rarely pay these.
- Don’t put all your eggs in one basket
- Putting all your money into a single business or type of investment for example, is risky. Spreading your money across different investments makes you less dependent on any one to do well.
- A good rule of thumb is not to invest more than 10% of your money in high-risk investments.
- The value of your investment can be reduced
- The percentage of the business that you own will decrease if the business issues more shares. This could mean that the value of your investment reduces, depending on how much the business grows. Most start-up businesses issue multiple rounds of shares.
- These new shares could have additional rights that your shares don’t have, such as the right to receive a fixed dividend, which could further reduce your chances of getting a return on your investment.
If you are interested in learning more about how to protect yourself, visit the FCA’s website here.
| Type: | EIS |
|---|---|
| Sector: | Technology |
| Target return: | 5x |
| Funds raised / sought: | £2.4m / £4m |
| Minimum investment: | £20,000 |
| Next application deadline: | 23 Jan 2026 for first close |
Important documents
| Type: | EIS |
|---|---|
| Sector: | Technology |
| Target return: | 5x |
| Funds raised / sought: | £2.4m / £4m |
| Minimum investment: | £20,000 |
| Next application deadline: | 23 Jan 2026 for first close |
Important documents
| About this deal | What to expect post-investment |
|---|---|
| This is a co-investment alongside Haatch Ventures LLP, which has reviewed the opportunity and selected it for its Haatch Direct service. Please read the offer documents carefully. | Haatch Ventures, the EIS fund manager, will produce initial and ongoing shareholder documents. |
This overview is provided to make it easier for you to form your own view about the opportunity.
Fast-growing “Uber for moving and storage”, trebling ARR in last six months
Stackt Ltd (“Stackt” or “the Company”) has developed a comprehensive moving services platform, with proprietary AI that tracks and takes care of every detail for customers – it’s been dubbed “Uber for moving and storage”.
The Company was founded by ex-Uber, Revolut and search engine software giant Semrush executives with multiple prior exits and deep experience scaling tech-enabled logistics businesses.
Stackt allows customers to book collection, storage and redelivery in just a few clicks – with live tracking, photo-verified inventory, and transparent billing. The technology aims to transform a potentially stressful experience into one that is fast, affordable and on-demand.
The Company generates recurring, high-margin revenue through a hybrid subscription model. Customers pay only for what they store, at a 60% profit margin for Stackt. Further income comes from add-on services provided by affiliate partners: home set up (45% margin), cleaning (20% margin), and international shipping (30%+ margin).
Launched in 2022 and currently operating out of the Greater London area, Stackt believes it is now at an inflection point to move from startup to scale up. The business has demonstrated rapid traction, achieving 3x growth over the last six months to an ARR run rate of £3.4 million and reports profitable unit economics, a sign of a scalable model, in a UK storage market worth £1.2 billion.
The global storage market is valued at £47 billion, forecast to reach £66 billion by 2030.
Stackt is now preparing to expand into its first international market Dubai – with an eye on the biggest storage market, the US, further down the line.
To help scale its technology and launch in Dubai, Stackt is seeking to raise £4 million under EIS. This Series A funding round is led by Raw Ventures, which is investing £1.6 million. Haatch is investing £400k.
Wealth Club has an exclusive allocation of £250k, investing on the same terms and managed under the Haatch EIS fund structure. The minimum investment is £20,000 and you can apply online.
The operationally profitable Company forecasts annual recurring revenues of £14 million by 2027 with more than 70% of operations automated by AI – high risk and not guaranteed.
Haatch believes the investment could potentially deliver a return in the region of 5x before EIS tax relief but after fees in five years – high risk and not guaranteed.
Please carefully read all investment documents prepared by the Company and Haatch to form your own view.
Important: The information on this website is for experienced investors. It is not advice nor a research or personal recommendation to invest. If you’re unsure, please seek advice. Investments are for the long term. They are high risk and illiquid and can fall as well as rise in value, so you could get back less than you invest.
The deal at a glance
| Type | Single-company EIS private offer |
| Stage | Growth / Series A |
| Date started trading | 2021 (platform launched in 2022) |
| Funding to date | £2 million |
| Current round size | £4 million |
| Lead and notable investors | Raw Ventures (£1.6 million), Haatch EIS, British Business Bank |
| Sector | Technology |
| Fully diluted pre-money valuation | £24 million |
| Market opportunity | £47 billion global storage market, forecast to reach £66 billion by 2030 |
| Business / revenue model | Subscription-based revenue with supplementary service income |
| ARR run rate | £3.4 million |
| Growth (last six months) | 3x ARR growth |
| Forecast ARR in FY27* | £14 million |
* Forecast and not guaranteed.
Note: the Company is currently loss-making. Capital is at risk: you could lose your investment.
Risks – important
This is a single company offer with no diversification. It involves investing in an early-stage, loss-making business, which is by nature high risk and prone to failure. There is a risk that the capital raised may not be sufficient to achieve the Company’s objectives. You could lose all the amount you invest.
There is no ready market for unlisted EIS shares: they are illiquid and hard to sell and value. There will need to be an exit for you to receive a realised return on your investment. Exits are likely to take considerably longer than the three-year minimum EIS holding period; equally, an exit within three years could impact tax relief.
To claim tax relief, you will need an EIS3 certificate, normally issued once shares have been allotted. This can take several months: please check the deployment timescales carefully. Tax reliefs depend on the company maintaining its EIS-qualifying status. Remember, tax rules can change and benefits depend on circumstances.
Before you invest, please carefully read the Information Memorandum which contains further details on the considerable risks – alongside the Wealth Club Risks and Commitments.
Please note: the Company is expected to be included in the current tranches of Haatch’s funds.
Structure and fees
Investors will invest in Stackt only via the Haatch EIS fund, an Alternative Investment Fund. The fund is managed by Haatch Ventures LLP, whilst Apex Unitas Limited (Mainspring) will act as the custodian and administrator. Wealth Club Limited is the introducer of this offer.
The investment is expected to be EIS-qualifying – not guaranteed.
Wealth Club investors will invest at the same price and on the same terms as the other investors in this round.
All the services Wealth Club and, where applicable, its subsidiaries provide are governed by the Terms and Conditions of the Wealth Club Services.
Fees
A set-up and management fee of 6% will be payable to Haatch. This fee will be deducted from your subscription and will reduce the amount invested and on which tax relief can be claimed.
Haatch will also receive a performance fee on returns over £1 per £1 invested: 25% on proceeds between 1x and 5x, 30% on proceeds over 5x.
Haatch will share these fees 50/50 with Wealth Club. This will not involve any additional costs to investors or the company.
The fees and charges above are stated exclusive of VAT, which applies in some cases, as determined by the manager. Please check the VAT position carefully in the offer documents.
This financial promotion has been communicated and approved by Wealth Club Ltd on 13 January 2026
Wealth Club aims to make it easier for experienced investors to find information on – and apply for – investments. You should base your investment decision on the offer documents and ensure you have read and fully understand them before investing. The information on this webpage is a marketing communication. It is not advice or a personal or research recommendation to buy any of the investments mentioned, nor does it include any opinion as to the present or future value or price of these investments. It does not satisfy legal requirements promoting investment research independence and is thus not subject to prohibitions on dealing ahead of its dissemination.