GP Commitment
What is GP Commitment?
GP Commitment is the capital that the General Partner (or its principals) commits to the fund alongside LPs, typically ranging from 1% to 5% of total fund size. This “skin in the game” aligns the GP’s economic interests with those of the LPs and is a standard term evaluated by institutional investors during fund due diligence.
Why It Matters
GP Commitment is a key alignment mechanism that institutional LPs scrutinize during due diligence. A meaningful GP commitment demonstrates conviction and ensures the GP has economic skin in the game alongside their investors, reducing principal-agent risk.
Key Takeaways
- 1
Typically ranges from 1% to 5% of total fund size, committed by the GP alongside LPs.
- 2
Serves as “skin in the game” to align GP and LP economic interests.
- 3
A standard due diligence item for institutional investors evaluating fund commitments.
Related Terms
More Fund Terms Terms
Explore related concepts from the same category to deepen your understanding.
Fund of Funds (FOF)
A Fund of Funds is a pooled investment vehicle that allocates capital to a portfolio of underlying private equity, venture capital, or other alternative investment funds rather than investing directly in companies. FOFs provide diversification across GPs, strategies, vintages, and geographies, and are commonly used by institutional investors and family offices seeking managed access to the PE/VC asset class.
Read MoreGeneral Partner (GP)
The General Partner is the entity (typically the fund management firm or its affiliate) responsible for managing a private equity or venture capital fund, making investment decisions, and handling day-to-day operations. The GP bears unlimited liability for the fund’s obligations and earns management fees and carried interest in exchange for managing LP capital.
Read MoreLimited Partner (LP)
A Limited Partner is an investor in a private equity or venture capital fund who contributes capital but does not participate in the fund’s management or investment decisions. LPs enjoy limited liability (their exposure is capped at their capital commitment) and include pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments, insurance companies, family offices, and high-net-worth individuals.
Read MoreCapital Call / Drawdown
A capital call (also called a drawdown) is a formal demand issued by the GP to LPs requiring them to transfer a portion of their unfunded capital commitment to the fund, typically to finance new investments, pay fees, or cover fund expenses. LPs generally have 10 to 15 business days to fund a capital call after receiving a drawdown notice.
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