Applications close in 48 hours — here’s everything Australian founders need to know about Stripe x Startup Battlefield
Applications close in 48 hours — here’s everything Australian founders need to know about Stripe x Startup Battlefield
The window is almost shut. On August 19, eight startups will take the stage at Stripe Tour Sydney in front of investors, global press, and the Australian tech community. One startup walks away with automatic entry into TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco — no application, no further competition, a guaranteed spot on the world’s most iconic startup stage.
There are only 48 hours left to apply. Don’t wait.
Here’s everything you need to know.
What is Stripe x Startup Battlefield?
Startup Battlefield is TechCrunch’s flagship pitch competition — the one that launched Dropbox, Cloudflare, Discord, and Trello. Collectively, Startup Battlefield alumni have raised $32 billion and produced more than 250 exits across 1,700+ companies worldwide.
The Stripe x Startup Battlefield is a first-of-its-kind partnership with Stripe, bringing the competition to Sydney for one night only. Eight Australian startups will be selected to pitch live. Three will win prizes. One will go to San Francisco.
Grand winner: $15,000 in Stripe fee credits + automatic entry into Startup Battlefield 200 at TechCrunch Disrupt, San Francisco, October 13–15, 2026.
Second place: $5,000 in Stripe fee credits.
Third place: $2,000 in Stripe fee credits.
Every applicant — whether selected to pitch or not — will be invited and registered to attend Stripe Tour Sydney on August 19.
What we look for — and what won’t hold you back
We are not looking for the most polished companies in Australia. We are looking for the most promising ones. The question we ask about every application is simple: Does this change something? Not incrementally — genuinely.
A few things that will not disqualify you:
Some press coverage won’t hurt you. If your company has had local or industry coverage but your core technology hasn’t had its moment yet, that’s exactly what this stage is for.
You don’t need customers yet. You need a working MVP, but revenue and launch are not requirements.
You’ve applied before. Many Startup Battlefield companies applied more than once before being selected. A past rejection is not a data point about your company’s future.
How to put together a strong application
Show your product working. Not a mockup. Not a pitch deck with screenshots. Your actual MVP, in real time, on video — even if it’s rough. This is the single most important part of your application.
Be honest about your competition. Naming your competitors and explaining specifically why you win tells us more about your market understanding than any TAM slide ever will.
Tell us why you. The founding story — what you saw, why now, why you’re the right person to build this — is a meaningful part of how we evaluate teams. Most founders underwrite it. Don’t.
Don’t overengineer it. A clear, honest application that shows a real product will outperform a polished one that buries the company underneath it.
The deadline is July 20. It will not move.
Applications close Monday, July 20, 2026, at 11:59 p.m. AEST. There are no more extensions. There is no waitlist. Once it closes, the only way to that stage is in the audience.
If you’re still deciding whether to apply — apply. The worst outcome is a stronger application next time. The best outcome is a stage in San Francisco in October.
The next company nobody has heard of yet is building something that will matter. It could be yours.
Free to apply · No equity taken · In-person, Sydney, August 19, 2026.
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Isabelle leads Startup Battlefield, TechCrunch’s iconic launchpad and competition for the world’s most promising early-stage startups.
You can contact or verify outreach from Isabelle by emailing isabelle.johannessen@techcrunch.com.
She scouts top founders across 99+ countries and prepares them to pitch on the Disrupt stage in front of tier-one investors and global media. Before TechCrunch, she designed and led international startup acceleration programs across Japan, Korea, Italy, and Spain—connecting global founders with VCs and helping them successfully enter the U.S. market. With a Master’s in Entrepreneurship & Disruptive Innovation—and a past life as a professional singer—she brings a blend of strategic rigor and stage presence to help founders craft compelling stories and stand out in crowded markets.