European founder here and I was wondering if there is an official stance on companies applying to YC and their resulting location. I couldn't find a clear answer to this in the FAQ so maybe the official stance on this could be added.<p>Within the very thought out application to YC there are two fields to answer:<p><pre><code> - Where do you live now, and where would the company be based after YC?
- Explain your decision regarding location.
</code></pre>
I do not think they would be here should location not matter.<p>Dalton Caldwell and Michael Seibel discuss on the YC podcast the importance of starting a startup in the bay area[1] (despite having different living preferences).<p>Tweets from SF partners[2] also ellude to a preference to founders who will move to the US/San Francisco as they believe this will result in startups that perform better.<p>On the flip side, Gary Tan is often complaining about the state of San Fran politics and the effect on the city (and having visited there a few times, I can see why).<p>Personally I can understand the benefits of a network effect and a higher concentration of investors and founders in an area however I also know that talent, connections and communities are global. Early stages of a business may benefit from concentrated startup resources but only if the founders actually engage with it. I think this is why YC is run in-person for 3 months and I do believe this will be beneficial to get a company off the ground. Long term however, I'm not so sure this is necessary.<p>Does YC have an official stance on giving preference to startups who are willing to locate in the US/San Francisco?<p><pre><code> - [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqGOCF4O6ks
- [2] https://twitter.com/snowmaker/status/1769753085772169382</code></pre>
The obsession with SF amazes me. Despite being HCOL, brutal talent war, and a host of other things investors will still push you to setup operations there even at the beginning where your runway is super important. Talent being a main driver doesn't make much sense when the war there is like a bloodbath, people who are considered "top talent" get many offers so they can jump ship whenever there is a good opportunity.<p>If you setup operations in another city whether it's in a European city like Dublin[1] or another US city like Denver, you can attract top talent and pay them lower than you would in somewhere like SF. You will have larger runway to find PMF. If you really want to go to SF you could do that once you've found PMF and scaled up.<p>I'm curious as to what others think.<p>[1] Some would say Dublin is HCOL, that's true to some extent. There's a housing crisis there but it's still considerably cheaper than SF and salaries are lower than in SF. Apartments are not difficult to find and there's a lot of other places you can live outside of Dublin which would take you 20 - 40 minutes to get to the city.