


Goldman Sachs & Co and Allen & Company are the lead underwriters for the IPO.Duolingo launched its language learning app in 2012, and ever since it has gathered millions of users and become one of the number 1 apps in education. The company was founded in 2011 by von Ahn and Severin Hacker, who met at Carnegie Mellon University. Almost 1.4 million of those shares were sold by existing stockholders and the proceeds will not go to the company.Įarlier this week, the company raised its price target range to between $95 and $100 per share, from an earlier estimate of between $85 and $95 per share. The company also plans to expand more in Asia, its fastest growing region.Ĭurrently, Duolingo's largest market is the United States, home to 20% of its users and bringing in 45% of the company's revenue, von Ahn said.ĭuolingo raised nearly $521 million in the IPO by selling about 5.1 million shares. Duolingo offers courses in 40 languages to about 40 million monthly active users. "Being a public company will allow us to operate at a higher level, and get going from the minor leagues to the major leagues," said Luis von Ahn, co-founder and chief executive officer of Duolingo.įollowing the IPO, the company will focus on improving its flagship app and getting more active users to switch to paying subscribers, von Ahn said. The company's flotation comes at a time of increased investor interest in the edtech space, after pandemic restrictions sent students and teachers from the classroom to the web. The stock later pared some gains to trade at $130.92 in the afternoon. July 28 (Reuters) - Language learning app Duolingo Inc (DUOL.O) notched a valuation of $6.5 billion after its shares surged nearly 40% in the company's Nasdaq debut on Wednesday, becoming the latest education technology startup to impress Wall Street.ĭuolingo's stock opened at $141.4 per share, blowing past the initial public offering price (IPO) of $102 per share, which crossed the top end of its target range.
