
Revenue, EBITDA, P&L, balance sheets, and ownership: sourced straight from each country's official register, and searchable in Inven alongside everything else.
Private company financials are now available in Inven across 14 European markets, pulled directly from official sources in each country: the UK, Ireland, Germany, Austria, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Estonia, and Poland.
Revenue, EBITDA, profit and loss, balance sheets, and ownership structures sit in the same place you already research companies, so there's no switching between tools to piece a financial picture together.
Why this matters for deal teams
For deal teams, assembling that picture has usually meant working across several sources at once: discovery in one tool, financials in another, then time spent verifying numbers that came from third-party estimates.
Independent, founder-led, and cross-border companies made it harder still, because they rarely show up cleanly in databases built around fundraising.
As Carlos Cesta, partner at the cross-border advisory makanta services, puts it: "Traditional platforms like PitchBook or S&P Capital IQ gave us good coverage of the larger market, but independent firms were almost invisible because they rarely raised capital."
The difference here is the source. Rather than licensing modelled estimates, Inven takes financials straight from the official register in each country and structures them, so the figures are traceable to the filings they came from.
What's now in a company profile
For covered markets, each company profile includes:
- Key figures: revenue, EBITDA, EBIT, gross and operating profit, total assets, liabilities, and debt
- Full income statement and balance sheet: the consolidated key figures, with the option to open the full raw line items
- Revenue and EBITDA charts over time
- Ownership charts to map company structures, and the decision makers behind them
- Downloadable original filings: every figure traces back to the source document, which you can open to verify
Because the financials are structured like the rest of the data in Inven, you can search and filter by them directly, whether by revenue range, EBITDA, or individual statement lines, and switch to the currency you prefer.
A buy-side team can ask for "UK software companies, £5–20M revenue" and screen on financial fit, not just sector. A sell-side team can gauge a buyer's financial capacity before making an approach. And anyone mapping a market can compare performance across a whole sector at once.
This is already part of how teams work in Inven. Imbiba, the UK growth investor, uses the private-company financials to check balance sheets and revenue in early diligence, pulling Companies House data and the underlying filings without leaving the company profile.
Financials from official European registers
Financials are live now for the following markets, each sourced from the country's official register:
- United Kingdom: Companies House
- Ireland: Companies Registration Office (CRO)
- Germany: Bundesanzeiger
- Austria: Firmenbuch (JustizOnline)
- France: INPI
- Belgium: National Bank of Belgium (NBB)
- Netherlands: Kamer van Koophandel (KvK)
- Luxembourg: Luxembourg Business Register & STATEC
- Denmark: Central Business Register (CVR)
- Sweden: Bolagsverket
- Norway: Brønnøysund Register Centre
- Finland: Finnish Patent and Registration Office
- Estonia: Centre of Registers and Information Systems (RIK)
- Poland: Krajowy Rejestr Sądowy (KRS)
Switzerland is also covered for ownership structures and decision makers. Financial figures are not included there, as they are not published through the Swiss register.
Additional European markets are rolling out through the summer, including the Czech Republic, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Lithuania, and Latvia.
The exact figures available depend on each country’s filing rules. In every company profile, the original filing is linked, so the numbers can be traced back to their source.
How to access European private financials
Rather than working through one national register at a time, you can search all 14 European markets in a single place.
As Carlos Cesta, Partner at makanta services says of the effect on a lean team: "Being small, we can be global thanks to Inven. Even after moving from the U.S. to Rome, I could walk into client meetings with credible, data-backed insights."
"Being small, we can be global thanks to Inven. Even after moving from the U.S. to Rome, I could walk into client meetings with credible, data-backed insights."
See what Inven holds in your market. Book a demo and explore your vertical with us.
Financial data is sourced from official national registers and structured by Inven. Original filings are linked in each company profile.
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Frequently asked questions
Does Inven have private company financials for European companies?
Yes. Inven has financials for private companies across 14 European markets, taken directly from each country's official register. Each company profile shows revenue, EBITDA, profit and loss, and the balance sheet, with the original filing attached.
Where does Inven get its private company financial data?
From official national registers, not modelled estimates. Because every figure comes from the company's own filing, it traces back to a source document you can open and verify inside the profile.
How do I find a private company's revenue?
Private companies don't report results the way listed companies do, but across most of Europe they file annual accounts with a national register. Inven aggregates those filings for 14 countries, so where a company has reported revenue, you can search and filter on it; some countries and smaller company sizes don't require revenue to be filed.
Are private company accounts public and free?
It depends on the country. Some registers are fully open (the Nordics, for example); others charge per document or limit what smaller companies must disclose. Inven brings the filings from 14 markets into one place and links each original document.
Can I download the original filing?
Yes. Every covered company profile links the annual report or accounts exactly as filed with the official register, so you can check any figure at source.
Which European countries does Inven cover for private company financials?
Inven has private company financials for 14 European markets, each sourced from the country's official register: the UK, Ireland, Germany, Austria, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Estonia, and Poland.
Can I find a UK private company's turnover and accounts?
Yes, through Companies House, where UK companies file annual accounts. Note that small companies can file "filleted" accounts that leave out the profit-and-loss account, so turnover and profit may not appear even when the balance sheet is filed.
Are Irish private company accounts public?
Yes. Irish companies file annual returns with financial statements at the Companies Registration Office (CRO); smaller companies may file abridged accounts with reduced detail.
How do I find German private company financials?
German companies publish their annual financial statements (Jahresabschluss) in the Bundesanzeiger, the Federal Gazette, so they're public, though spread across filings rather than a single standardized record.
Where can I find Austrian company financials?
Austrian companies file their accounts with the Firmenbuch, the commercial register, accessible via JustizOnline. Smaller companies file in less detail.
How do I find a French company's revenue (chiffre d'affaires)?
French companies file annual accounts that are centralized through INPI. One quirk to know: small companies can request that their accounts stay confidential, so for some firms the figures won't be publicly available.
Are Belgian company accounts public?
Yes. Belgian companies file annual accounts with the National Bank of Belgium's Central Balance Sheet Office, one of Europe's more complete public sources.
How do I find Dutch company financials (KvK)?
Dutch companies file with the Kamer van Koophandel (KvK). How much is disclosed depends on company size, so micro and small companies often file a limited balance sheet only, without revenue.
Where can I find Luxembourg company financials?
Luxembourg companies file their accounts with the Luxembourg Business Register (LBR), with figures also reported to the statistics office, STATEC.
How do I find Danish company accounts (CVR)?
Denmark is among the most open in Europe: companies file annual reports through the Central Business Register (CVR). EBIT and gross profit tend to have the best coverage, as some companies don't report revenue.
Are Swedish company financials public (Bolagsverket)?
Yes. Swedish companies file annual reports with Bolagsverket, and they're publicly available.
How do I find Norwegian company financials?
Norwegian annual accounts are filed with the Brønnøysund Register Centre and are openly available to the public.
Where can I find Finnish company financials?
Finnish companies file their accounts with the Finnish Patent and Registration Office (PRH), where they're public.
Are Estonian company financials public?
Yes. Estonian companies file annual reports through the e-Business Register, run by the Centre of Registers and Information Systems (RIK), one of Europe's most digital registers.
How do I find Polish company financials (KRS)?
Polish companies file financial statements to the National Court Register (KRS), through its repository of financial documents, where they're publicly accessible.
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