Our Mission
We're building Sava because we've been on the other side.
After his first exit, Nimit tried to set up a trust for tax planning. What should have been straightforward stretched into months of frustration—endless emails, PDFs bouncing back and forth, zero visibility into what was actually happening. Rush watched founders hit similar walls: reaching a liquidity event only to discover that wealth planning required $10M+ minimums, six-figure fees, and institutions that spoke a different language.
The irony wasn't lost on us. Trusts are powerful tools—perfect for QSBS planning, managing concentrated risk, transferring wealth across generations. But the industry made them feel like relics: high friction, opaque processes, accessible only to those who already had everything figured out.
As technical founders, we saw something else. We saw that trust administration is fundamentally about workflows, data, and compliance—problems that modern software should solve elegantly. We saw an entire ecosystem locked behind unnecessary complexity, serving a tiny fraction of the people who could benefit from it.
"For decades, trusts were the tool of a few—powerful but gated and opaque.
That's what we're changing. We're treating the trust charter as infrastructure. With that foundation, we can build a platform that makes sophisticated wealth planning as accessible as opening a Stripe account. Real-time dashboards instead of quarterly PDFs. API integrations instead of manual reconciliation. Human experts reviewing critical decisions, with automation handling the routine work.
This isn't about making trust administration incrementally better. It's about fundamentally broadening who gets access to these capabilities. Families preserving and transferring wealth shouldn't need $10M and insider connections to get institutional-quality service. Founders planning for exits shouldn't have to navigate a maze of opacity and six-month timelines.
"We're building the platform we wish existed—making capabilities once reserved for the 1% available to everyone who needs them.
— Nimit & Rush

