Senior Product Designer
Company: Finix
Location: San Francisco, CA
Type: Full-time
Level: Senior
Posted: 2026-03-07
About this role
About Us
Move money. Make money. Finix is a full-stack acquirer processor, empowering businesses of all sizes with flexible, modern payment solutions. Processing billions of dollars annually, Finix enables SaaS, marketplace, and e-commerce platforms to accept payments, manage payouts, and onboard merchants seamlessly. With our no-code, low-code, and developer-friendly tools, businesses can get up and running in hours—not months.
Finix has raised over $175M, including a $75M Series C led by Acrew Capital, with participation from Lightspeed Venture Partners, Leap Global, American Express Ventures, Bain Capital Ventures, Homebrew, Inspired Capital, Sequoia Capital, Visa, and others.
About The Role
The Senior Product Designer will be responsible for designing the core Finix payments dashboard and defining its future. While Finix has historically been a developer-focussed company, over the past few years Design has taken center stage at taking products and features from ideation to production. Product Designers at Finix are responsible for setting the vision, designing solutions, prototyping and testing, and overseeing implementation of all dashboard features. As a part of a small but mighty team of award winning designers, you will have a lot of autonomy and the opportunity to make a strong impact on product quality and execution.
You are
- You have experience working in incredibly fast paced and lean startup environments. It’s not just something we say – we truly move faster than most startups
- You are excited to solve complex and esoteric problems in the world of payments
- You welcome constructive criticism, solicit feedback, and try to engage with new perspectives. The Product Design team at Finix acts as the voice of the customer and is trusted to have a deep understanding of user problems
- You can find a meaningful balance between optimizing for speed and quality, and understand the importance of iterating as you learn
- You have w...