Figma Sets $16.4 billion Valuation in IPO Bid, Marking A Tech Market Rebound.

After dodging Adobe and doubling down on growth (plus Bitcoin), Figma’s IPO could reset the tone for tech listings in 2025.

Shalom Ihuoma
5 Min Read

Figma, the design tool that’s basically the Google Docs of UI/UX, is officially filing for an IPO. Translation? It wants to become a public company and it’s not playing small. According to Reuters, the company is looking to raise over $1 billion by offering about 37 million shares, each priced between $25 and $28. That puts its fully diluted valuation, that is, total value if all possible shares existed,  at a cool $16.4 billion.

 Wait, what’s a “fully diluted valuation”?

Basically, it’s the valuation if every single share that could possibly be claimed (like employee stock options or convertible securities) is counted. It gives a more realistic picture of what the company would be worth once all those shares hit the market. It’s kind of like calculating how much you would really owe if all your bills came in at once.

 Why is this a big deal?

  • This is one of the biggest tech IPOs of 2025, and it’s happening during a quiet period for public offerings. The market has been shy ever since rates went up and investors got picky.
  • Figma’s success (or failure) on the NYSE could signal whether other tech firms should jump in or sit tight.
  • It comes just after another big IPO from Circle, the stable coin company behind USDC, proving investor confidence is creeping back in (Reuters).

Let’s not forget the Adobe drama

Remember when Adobe tried to buy Figma for $20 billion back in 2022? Yeah, that didn’t go through. Regulators in both the UK and EU hit the brakes hard, arguing that Adobe was trying to snuff out its most promising design rival. Fast forward to now, and that failed deal might’ve been the best thing to ever happen to Figma. Instead of being absorbed into a larger company, it kept growing and fast (FT).

 By the numbers

  • Revenue in Q1 2025: $228 million
  • Growth: 46% higher than the same time last year
  • Net profit: Tripled from 2024 to $44.9 million
  • Headcount: 1,300 employees
  • International revenue: 60% of sales come from outside the U.S Reuters

And then, Figma has part ownership in Bitcoin

Here’s a twist, Figma has $70 million invested in a Bitcoin ETF specifically, the Bitwise Bitcoin ETF. It even plans to add another $30 million soon. Why? According to the company, it’s part of a modern, diversified treasury strategy. In plain English: they’re trying to be financially savvy, and not just putting all their cash in boring bonds MarketWatch. But, not everything is rainbows and revenue. The IPO filing comes with the usual list of risks and a few eyebrow raisers:

  • AI is catching up. Tools like Canva and Adobe Firefly are integrating smart design assistants. Figma admits this could steal users.
  • Global risks. With most of its revenue coming from abroad and many of its employees on U.S. work visas, Figma is sensitive to changes in immigration policy or economic slowdowns.
  • Aggressive growth ahead. CEO Dylan Field hinted at future acquisitions even if they “may not seem immediately rational.” Bold or risky? You decide. Reuters

Related: Microsoft Just Found a Big Hole in its Server Software – And hackers Are Already Crawling Through It.

So what happens next?

Figma will officially list on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol FIG. Investors will be watching closely to see if this signals a revival of the tech IPO market or just another hype cycle.

If Figma performs well, expect a domino effect. More tech companies might step forward with their own IPO plans. If it flops? The market might stay dry a little longer.

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