Funding

Banza Pasta Lands $20 Million Investment

NEW YORK — Banza, a line of pasta made from chickpeas, has landed $20 million in growth funding, led by Enlightened Hospitality Investments — the growth equity fund affiliated with Danny Meyer’s Union Square Hospitality Group – and Prelude Growth Partners — a consumer product goods focused growth equity fund.

The capital will be used to grow Banza’s team, support marketing efforts and commercialize its product pipeline.

Brothers Brian and Scott Rudolph launched Banza in 2014 to make nutritious food more accessible in the U.S. by reimagining comfort food classics traditionally made with wheat, corn, and rice, with chickpeas, one of the most efficient and sustainable protein sources on the planet.

The company first launched with chickpea pastas that have nearly double the protein, three times the fiber, and one-third fewer net carbs than traditional pasta — a comfort food staple that Americans eat 2.7 million tons of per year. Today, Banza is the fastest-selling pasta brand in Whole Foods and Target and is available in 12,000+ retailer doors nationwide.

“It’s hard to imagine more impactful partners than EHI and Prelude, given their unique strengths across foodservice, brand building, and team culture,” said Brian Rudolph, CEO and Co-Founder of Banza. “Their combined expertise will help us realize our mission of making nutritious, sustainable foods more accessible.”

Beyond pasta, Banza recently launched chickpea mac & cheese and chickpea rice, and with this latest funding, the team will continue to reimagine other mealtime comfort foods. Additionally, Banza will scale investment in its US-based supply chain to fuel future growth. The company opened its own manufacturing facility in California to keep up with the growing demand for its products from consumers and retailers alike, increasing its capacity by 10 times, and has partnered with U.S.-based chickpea farmers.

“At Enlightened Hospitality Investments, we invest in ideas we wish we’d thought of ourselves and companies run by people we wish we had hired ourselves,” said Mark Leavitt, Co-Founder and a Managing Partner at Enlightened Hospitality Investments. “Our investment in Banza, a company that is successfully disrupting categories that consumers love but where they have been offered little in the way of innovation, is a perfect example of our strategy being put to work. We have been closely watching consumer interest in plant-based protein within the Foodservice and CPG industries and are excited to watch Banza continue to capitalize on these trends.”