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FinVault: The Central Coast fintech startup quietly reshaping how SMEs manage cash flow

A Broadwater-based financial technology company is challenging traditional banking with a platform that's already saved local businesses over $12 million in processing fees.

By Central Coast Tech Desk · Published 29 June 2026 at 10:53 pm · 2 min read(379 words)

Verified by The Daily Central Coast editorial teamReviewed by our Central Coast editorial team. Last verified: 30 June 2026 at 1:32 am.

Tucked away in a converted warehouse on Sutherland Street in Broadwater, FinVault has spent the last eighteen months building something that should have existed years ago: a transparent, AI-powered cash flow management system designed specifically for small and medium-sized enterprises across the Central Coast and beyond.

The company, founded by a team of former banking technologists, launched its core platform in January 2026 to a closed beta of fifty local businesses. By June, that number has grown to over 800 users, processing an average of $2.3 million in transactions daily. The platform's killer feature is its ability to predict cash shortfalls up to sixty days in advance—something that traditional accounting software and bank dashboards have never reliably delivered.

"We saw a real problem," explains FinVault's operations lead in a recent company blog post. "SMEs on the Central Coast were managing their finances across five different systems: their bank portal, their accountant's software, their payroll system, their invoicing tool, and a spreadsheet. We decided to build the connective tissue."

What makes FinVault distinct from existing fintech players is its pricing model. Rather than charging a percentage of transaction volume—the industry standard—FinVault operates on a flat monthly fee structure: $99 for businesses with turnover under $500,000, and $299 for those above that threshold. Early adopters at venues like the Gosford business hub and several retailers along The Esplanade reported immediate ROI through reduced late payment penalties alone.

The startup has also partnered with Westpac's Open Banking initiative, meaning FinVault users can now aggregate data from multiple accounts across different banks into a single dashboard. Integration with Central Coast-based accountancy firms is underway, with three local practices already piloting the system.

Venture capital attention is mounting. In May, the company secured a $4.2 million Series A round led by a Sydney-based fund, though the team remains committed to maintaining its Broadwater headquarters and engineering centre. Plans for 2027 include expansion into payroll forecasting and supplier payment optimization.

For a Central Coast tech ecosystem still finding its footing against Sydney's gravitational pull, FinVault represents something increasingly rare: genuine innovation rooted in local pain points, with early traction that suggests this might actually scale.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Central Coast

This article was produced by the The Daily Central Coast editorial desk and covers tech in Central Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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