How Do I Find Investor Office Addresses for In-Person Meetings?
Most founders skip in-person meetings because finding investor office addresses feels impossible. Here is exactly what works.
VC office addresses are publicly available through firm websites, LinkedIn, SEC filings, and investor databases. The fastest path is checking the firm's own contact page or using a platform like SheetVenture, which centralizes active investor data, including location details. Most founders overcomplicate this search when the information is findable in minutes.
In-person meetings carry weight that video calls rarely match. Walking into a VC's office puts a face, a handshake, and a real presence behind the pitch. Getting there starts with knowing where "there" is.
The good news is that most VC firms are not hiding. Their addresses sit in public places, and the ones that do not are only one polite email away.
Where VC Office Addresses Are Listed
Venture capital firms do not tend to obscure their location. The challenge is knowing which source is most reliable and which ones go stale. Here are the five most dependable methods, ranked by how often they deliver accurate results.
Firm website. The most accurate and up-to-date source. Look under "Contact," "About," or the site footer. If the firm has multiple offices, check which partners sit where. Most meetings happen at the partner's primary location, not the firm's headline city.
LinkedIn company page. Firms list their headquarters addresses on their LinkedIn profiles, and individual partner profiles also show location. This source updates faster than most database records, especially when firms move offices quietly.
SEC EDGAR. US-based VC firms managing registered funds file Form ADV with the SEC. The filing includes the principal office address and contact details. Search by firm name at adviserinfo.sec.gov. This works especially well for established firms that do not maintain detailed public websites.
Crunchbase and PitchBook. Both carry office location data for thousands of VC firms. Data freshness varies significantly across entries, so always cross-reference against the firm's own site before confirming an address.
SheetVenture's investor intelligence platform. SheetVenture tracks active investors with contact and location data updated in real time. Instead of checking four sources manually, founders can search by sector, stage, or geography and get address details alongside fund activity and deployment status.

What to Verify Before Booking the Trip
An address alone is not enough. A few quick checks before travel can prevent wasted time and an awkward first impression.
• Confirm the meeting is expected. Never drop in cold. Always get a confirmed meeting on the calendar before traveling to a VC's office. Most firms have no process for unannounced visitors, and showing up uninvited will not help your pitch.
• Ask which office the partner uses. Large firms often operate across multiple cities. One direct question, "Will we be meeting at your [city] office?", saves a wasted journey before it happens.
• Check for recent relocations. Firms move offices more than databases reflect, particularly post-2020. A quick search for "[firm name] new office [year]" surfaces changes faster than any database update cycle.
• Confirm building access. Many VC offices are inside secured commercial buildings. You may need to be added to a visitor list or check in at the lobby reception. Ask your contact directly how entry works before you arrive.
For a full picture of what to prepare before any investor meeting, review what to send investors before your first meeting so you walk in with the right materials already in hand.
When the Address Is Hard to Find
Smaller funds, solo GPs, and emerging managers sometimes operate from co-working spaces or personal offices with no public address listed anywhere. When that happens, the move is simple: email the firm's assistant or the investor directly and ask for the meeting location. It is not an awkward question. Every serious firm expects it.
Building your investor list with location and contact details tracked from the start also helps. When you know which city each investor operates from, you can plan in-person meeting windows around travel rather than scrambling to confirm details on short notice.
The broader skill of researching a VC firm before your meeting also reveals which city they are most active in, which often points you toward the right office before you even need to ask.
The Bottom Line
VC office addresses are findable through firm websites, LinkedIn, SEC EDGAR, and investor databases. Cross-check at least two sources, confirm the specific location with the partner you are meeting, and sort out building access details in advance. Showing up prepared for the logistics signals the same care you will bring to the meeting itself.
SheetVenture helps founders find active investors with accurate location and contact data, so every in-person meeting starts from real information, not outdated records.
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