
What Private Company Data Reveals About the German Investment Market
The German private sector is renowned for its Mittelstand, technical innovation, and global export strength — particularly in the automotive sector, where Germany ranks as one of the largest exporters of cars.
But if you were to ask five investors about the current state of private company investment, you’d likely get five different answers — each shaped by their respective networks, experiences, and geographic location.
This partly reflects the decentralised nature of company registration in Germany, where information is spread across multiple regional instances of the Handelsregister. Plus, reporting requirements tend to vary by company type and federal state.
In short, getting a clear picture of the state of investment in Germany — certainly on a company level and outside of the high-profile fundraisings — can be a real challenge.
This is where private company data platforms come into play.
What is private company data?
Before we examine the trends you can draw from access to company data, it’s worth explaining specifically what we mean by the term ‘private company data’.
In this instance, we’re talking about key business facts and figures, including (though not limited to):
- Basic info: Name, registered address, legal status, founding date, corporate structure
- People: Founders, directors, board members
- Sectors: Industry tags, innovation labels (e.g. AI, cleantech)
- Funding: Equity deals, investors, cap tables, funding amounts, dates
- Financials: Revenue, headcount, profit, GVA (gross value added)
- Grants & support: Public funding, accelerators
- IP & R&D: Patents, innovation activity
- Press: News coverage, announcements
- Growth signals: Hiring, expansion, partnerships
Some of these are publicly available on the Handelsregister, whilst others are not, or are harder to find — especially if the company hasn’t issued a press release.
What private company data can tell you
With access to high-quality, proprietary company data via a platform (like Beauhurst), you can begin to establish broader market trends by analysing segments of the market on a macro basis.
For example, if you’re in corporate finance, you could use this information to find companies with ageing directors and strong cash reserves, which could be about to undergo succession planning.
Similarly, if you’re an investor, you could look for innovative early-stage companies with unique intellectual property (IP) that are seeking to scale their operations and become profitable.
Here are some examples:
- 214 companies in Germany received equity funding in the first half of 2025 — with three raising over £100m each
- 75% of these companies (162) were based in either Berlin (91), Munich (46), or Cologne (25)
- Investment in the German startup market grew by €1b between 2023-2024
- The turnover of the top five automotive companies in Germany totalled €681b in 2023
Of course, in some cases, company financials are not so easily accessible. In April 2025, the UK government changed the audit threshold for companies, allowing them to file full accounts only if they have a £15m+ turnover. And in Germany, there is no audit requirement.
Fortunately, there are other ways that private company data can reveal interesting things about the German investment market.
How To Find Companies When You Can’t Search Across Their Financials
Since the UK government’s changes to the audit thresholds, we’ve analysed how else you can find companies when you can’t search across their financials.
Beauhurst Signals
We display signals on company profiles to help you see at a glance why a company may be interesting to you. These Signals fall into five groups: growth, innovation, environmental, social & governance, and risk.
Category | Signals |
---|---|
Growth | Equity fundraising Debt fundraising MBO/MBI Accelerator attendance 10% scaleup 20% scaleup High growth list feature IPO Acquired Made acquisition |
Innovation | R&D grant Academic spinout Patent |
Environmental | Clean and renewable energy Green transport Green building & infrastructure Sustainable food & farming Environmental accolades |
Social & Governance | Gender pay equality Gender equality of directors Age diversity of directors Social impact accolades |
Risk | Liquidation & insolvency |
This enables us to discover that 26% of German companies that have received equity funding in 2025 possess an environmental, social, or governance signal — indicators of green credentials and gender equality (amongst other metrics).
Let’s now turn to see how this works in practice on Beauhurst.
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Company spotlight
Isar Aerospace
We’ve already analysed the German investment market at the macro level — so let’s now explore this data at the company level. For this example, we’ve selected Isar Aerospace — a Ottobrunn-based spacetech company.

On the summary page for the company, we can see where it’s based, its industry tags, and three signals — equity fundraising, high growth list, and academic spinout — which denote activity in those three areas. We can also see that the company has raised £324m across five funding rounds.
For more information on those rounds, we can either click each transaction to bring up a page with more information on each deal, or we can select Transactions from the navigation bar.

This page offers a greater level of information on the company’s transactions, including the dates, amount raised, the stage of growth, and the investors involved in each round.
All this information can be found on Beauhurst, for every company listed on the Unternehmensregister — Germany’s closest equivalent to Companies House. The key difference here is that, as well as having additional data such as transactions and Signals, Beauhurst is a business platform, designed with an interface fit for commercial purposes, whereas the company register is designed for one-off, look-up usage.
A clearer view of German company data
With so much of Germany’s private sector operating quietly — often without press announcements, publicly available accounts, or investor commentary — it can be difficult to make confident decisions.
That’s why structured, accessible private company data matters. It doesn’t replace experience or local knowledge, but complements them. It adds context to prior knowledge, allowing patterns to emerge across companies, sectors, and regions.
For an investor, that might mean identifying a funding cluster in climate tech months before it makes the news.
For a founder, it could be benchmarking their own growth against peers in similar sectors.
And for professional advisors, it opens up brand-new opportunities to support scaling businesses — long before a press release is ever issued.
Having a clearer view of company-level activity across the country ensures that strategic decisions — whether in corporate finance, business development, or policy — are grounded in more than just anecdotes.
Beauhurst brings that visibility together in one place. So, whether you’re looking to benchmark growth, track funding trends, or uncover new opportunities, the platform is designed to help you find what matters more quickly.
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