At a glance
| Feature | Datapile | AngelMatch |
|---|---|---|
| Investor types covered | Angels + VCs + family offices | Angels-focused |
| Geographic coverage | 150+ countries | US-heavy |
| Verified emails | Yes | Yes |
| Stage/sector filters | Comprehensive | Solid for angels |
| Pricing model | Monthly subscription | Subscription + lifetime options |
| Data refresh | Continuous | Periodic |
Who AngelMatch is best for
AngelMatch is a good fit if you're raising a US-focused angel round and want a tightly-scoped angel-only database without VC clutter.
Pros
- Focused angel-only experience — minimal noise
- Lifetime-access option can be attractive for one-off raises
- Solid US angel coverage
- Simple, easy-to-use UI
Cons
- Angel-only — you'll need a separate tool for VCs
- US-heavy — lighter international angel coverage
- Narrower scope than broader investor databases
- Lighter family-office coverage
Who Datapile is best for
Datapile is a good fit if your fundraise will likely include a mix of angels, VCs and possibly family offices, or if you're raising outside the US.
Pros
- All investor types in one tool: angels, VCs, family offices
- Stronger international coverage including MENA, India, LATAM, Africa
- Continuously refreshed data
- Broader filter set across stage, sector, geography, check size
Cons
- No lifetime pricing option
- Broader scope means slightly more to navigate
Pricing
AngelMatch publishes subscription and lifetime-access options (see angelmatch.io for current pricing). Datapile is $49–$99/month with continuously updated data and a broader investor universe.
The bottom line
If you only need US angels, AngelMatch is a reasonable, focused choice. If your fundraise involves a mix of investor types or extends outside the US, Datapile is the more complete tool.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is AngelMatch better than Datapile for angel rounds?
Does AngelMatch cover international angels?
Which pricing model is better?
Compare Datapile to other tools
AngelList is best known as a syndicate and rolling fund platform. Founders use it to fundraise; angels use it to invest alongside leads.
Crunchbase is a general-purpose company intelligence platform. It tracks funding rounds, M&A, and company profiles across millions of companies.
PitchBook is a widely-used private-markets database inside VC, PE and investment banking. Pricing is sales-quoted and enterprise-oriented.
OpenVC is a community-maintained directory of venture firms. Browsing is free; export and direct contact data require a paid plan.