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    Finding a Cofounder in Munich

    Tailored for Munich

    Where to look in Munich, what to look for, and how to test the relationship before you commit. Munich's startup community is more corporate-adjacent than Berlin's but growing fast. Oktoberfest aside, the tech meetup scene is very active.

    Why Munich Is Great for Finding a Cofounder

    Munich's startup community is more corporate-adjacent than Berlin's but growing fast. Oktoberfest aside, the tech meetup scene is very active.

    The best co-founder relationships start with shared context — working on the same problem, attending the same program, or being in the same community.

    Where to Look

    The highest-signal channels in Munich. Hackathons and builder events are especially strong here. For curated links to communities and events, see the Munich playbook on the main page.

    • UnternehmerTUM — Europe's largest entrepreneurship center
    • hackaTUM — one of Europe's largest hackathons
    • Bits & Pretzels — flagship startup conference
    • European Builders League Munich editions

    What to Look For

    Skills matter, but alignment matters more. The best co-founder relationships are built on shared values and complementary strengths, not matching résumés.

    • Complementary skills: If you're technical, find someone commercial (and vice versa). Two engineers or two MBAs rarely works.
    • Shared intensity level: Do you both want to work 60-hour weeks, or is one of you looking for a lifestyle business? Misalignment here kills companies.
    • Communication style: Can you disagree productively? The first argument is more important than the first agreement.
    • Time horizon: Are you both committed for 5+ years? European companies often take longer to exit than US ones.
    • Geographic alignment: Will you both be in the same city, or is one of you remote? Co-located co-founders build faster in the early days.

    How to Test the Relationship

    Never go straight to 'let's start a company.' The best co-founder pairs test the relationship with a structured trial period.

    • Do a 2-week sprint together on a real problem — build a prototype, run customer interviews, or ship a landing page
    • Travel together for a weekend — how someone handles stress, logistics, and boredom tells you everything
    • Have the hard conversations early: equity split, roles, decision-making, what happens if one person wants to quit
    • Work from the same space for a month — coworking side by side reveals work habits and communication patterns
    • Set a 3-month 'dating period' before formalizing anything legal — EF and Antler both use this model successfully

    Local Hackathons & Events

    Munich's hackathon scene is anchored by hackaTUM — one of Europe's largest — and a growing AI/automotive tech event calendar. For curated links to hackathons and events, see the Munich playbook on the main page.

    • hackaTUM is TU Munich's flagship hackathon — 1,000+ participants
    • European Builders League hosts Munich editions for curated builders
    • BMW and Siemens sponsor corporate hackathons with real problems

    Red Flags to Watch For

    Not every co-founder match works out, and the warning signs are usually visible early. Trust your instincts on these.

    • They want to 'talk about the idea' for months without building anything — execution speed matters
    • They're not willing to commit full-time — part-time co-founders rarely work at the pre-seed stage
    • They want a huge equity stake but aren't willing to vest — this suggests they're not confident in the long-term
    • They avoid the hard conversations (money, equity, roles) — if they can't have these talks now, imagine fundraising together
    • They badmouth their previous co-founders — the pattern will repeat
    • Your gut says no — co-founder divorce is worse than real divorce. Trust the signal.
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