HubSpot's public acquisition history (4 notable deals) mapped against the engineering-signal panel we publish.
HubSpot (HQ Cambridge, MA) is one of the public-company acquirers whose M&A cadence shapes the technical-startup exit landscape. This page summarizes their publicly disclosed acquisitions, their stated focus areas, and how those map against the engineering-acceleration signals VC Deal Flow Signal tracks. HubSpot M&A is small and focused on data + AI primitives that fit the marketing/sales/service hubs. Clearbit (2023) was their largest deal, giving them B2B data enrichment as a core HubSpot capability. They scout companies that extend the CRM-adjacent data layer. No private data is published here — every deal listed below was announced via press release, SEC filing, or both.
4
Notable deals
3
Focus sectors
12
Companies we track
HubSpot M&A is small and focused on data + AI primitives that fit the marketing/sales/service hubs. Clearbit (2023) was their largest deal, giving them B2B data enrichment as a core HubSpot capability. They scout companies that extend the CRM-adjacent data layer.
HubSpot scouts B2B data, sales intelligence, and customer-success tooling that fits the CRM platform. Engineering-signal hallmarks: data-enrichment pipeline depth, deep CRM-integration experience, focus on SMB and mid-market customer segments.
Sorted by year (most recent first). Every deal here was announced publicly via press release, SEC filing, or both.
B2B data enrichment.
Conversation marketing / SMS.
Newsletter / business media.
AI for sales (talent acqui-hire).
Documents, collaboration, knowledge management, and the prosumer + team productivity layer. A single page mapping who builds, who funds, and who leads in productivity & knowledge work.
Warehousing, transformation, BI, and the analyst-facing query surface on top of operational data. A single page mapping who builds, who funds, and who leads in data analytics.
Payments, banking infrastructure, embedded finance, fraud, and the API surface for financial workflows. A single page mapping who builds, who funds, and who leads in fintech.
We do not claim these companies are acquisition targets. They are simply companies in the engineering-signal panel that sit in the same sectors HubSpot has historically acquired in.
This page documents 4 notable public acquisitions by HubSpot — every deal here was announced via press release, SEC filing, or both. HubSpot's full acquisition history may include smaller, undisclosed talent acquisitions; we list only the publicly documented deals that materially shaped their direction.
HubSpot scouts B2B data, sales intelligence, and customer-success tooling that fits the CRM platform. Engineering-signal hallmarks: data-enrichment pipeline depth, deep CRM-integration experience, focus on SMB and mid-market customer segments.
HubSpot M&A is small and focused on data + AI primitives that fit the marketing/sales/service hubs. Clearbit (2023) was their largest deal, giving them B2B data enrichment as a core HubSpot capability. They scout companies that extend the CRM-adjacent data layer.
No. This page is an independent summary of HubSpot's publicly disclosed acquisitions and stated focus areas. HubSpot has not endorsed, paid for, or reviewed this page. All deals listed are sourced from their own press releases, SEC filings, or both. We do not publish private deals or speculation about future acquisitions.
Two workflows. (1) Pattern matching: when scouting acquisition targets, the 4-deal history above is a published reference for what HubSpot actually buys — useful for triangulating "would they buy this?" judgments. (2) Sector overlap: the focus-sectors mapping connects HubSpot's historical M&A pattern to the engineering-signal panel we publish, so analysts can correlate acquisition pace with sector-level signal acceleration.
Weekly digest of productivity, analytics, fintech momentum, surfaced 3 to 6 weeks before announcements.
See First Look