Wed, 01 Jul 2026
10:38:56 am
Synopsis
Indian startup funding stood at $5.2 billion across 501 deals in H1 2026, down 9% YoY. Check the latest funding trends, AI startup boom, Bengaluru's dominance, stage-wise investment analysis, unicorn additions and market outlook.

India's startup ecosystem raised $5.2 billion across 501 funding deals during the first half of 2026, reflecting a 9% year-on-year decline in funding value compared to the same period last year. Despite lower capital deployment, the total number of funding deals increased by 7%, indicating that investor interest remains strong but funding has become more selective and disciplined.
The moderation in funding was largely driven by a sharp decline in large late-stage investments, with only four funding rounds exceeding $100 million during the January-June period. Instead of writing fewer large cheques, investors increasingly focused on backing a broader range of early and growth-stage startups with stronger business fundamentals, sustainable unit economics and long-term growth potential.
Artificial Intelligence (AI), deeptech and growth-stage startups emerged as the biggest beneficiaries during the period, while Bengaluru continued to dominate India's startup ecosystem. The latest funding trends suggest the market is shifting towards quality investments rather than aggressive capital deployment, reflecting the increasing maturity of India's startup landscape.
| Particulars | H1 2026 | H1 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Funding | $5.2 Billion | $5.7 Billion | â–¼ 9% |
| Total Deals | 501 | 468 | â–² 7% |
| $100M+ Funding Rounds | 4 | 11 | â–¼ 64% |
| Active Investors | 1,100+ | — | Increased Participation |
| New Unicorns | 5 | 5 | Stable |
Investment activity varied significantly across funding stages during the first half of 2026. While late-stage funding witnessed a notable slowdown, investors increased allocations towards growth-stage and seed-stage startups, reflecting a preference for companies with scalable business models and stronger execution potential.
| Funding Stage | Amount Raised | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|
| Late Stage | $2.2 Billion | â–¼ 27% |
| Growth Stage | $2.3 Billion | â–² 15% |
| Seed Stage | $478 Million | â–² 18% |
Artificial Intelligence became the standout investment theme during H1 2026 as investors significantly increased capital allocation towards AI-driven startups. Strong enterprise adoption, government initiatives supporting AI infrastructure and growing demand for indigenous AI technologies boosted investor confidence across the sector.
Deeptech startups also maintained strong momentum, while traditional sectors such as fintech and ecommerce continued attracting significant investments despite moderation in funding values.
| Sector | Funding Trend |
|---|---|
| Artificial Intelligence | â–² 317% YoY |
| Deeptech | â–² 17% YoY |
| Fintech | Largest funded sector despite decline |
| Ecommerce | Funding moderated but highest deal volume |
Bengaluru retained its position as India's leading startup hub, accounting for more than half of the country's total startup funding during the first six months of 2026. The city continued attracting investments across AI, fintech, SaaS and deeptech startups, while Delhi NCR and Mumbai remained the second and third largest startup ecosystems respectively.
| Startup Hub | Funding Raised |
|---|---|
| Bengaluru | $2.7 Billion |
| Delhi NCR | $917 Million |
| Mumbai | $587 Million |
One of the biggest trends during H1 2026 was the decline in mega funding rounds. Only four startups secured investments exceeding $100 million, compared with eleven such deals during the same period last year. This indicates that investors are becoming increasingly cautious about deploying large amounts of capital and are focusing more on sustainable growth, profitability and capital efficiency.
The median funding size remained broadly stable, suggesting that investors continue supporting quality startups but at more reasonable valuations amid global macroeconomic uncertainty.
| Funding Trend | H1 2026 |
|---|---|
| Mega Deals ($100M+) | 4 |
| Investor Focus | Sustainable Growth |
| Valuation Approach | More Disciplined |
| Capital Deployment | Wider Distribution Across Startups |
While startup IPO activity remained relatively subdued during the first half of the year, mergers and acquisitions (M&A) continued to gain traction as the preferred exit route for investors. Strategic acquisitions and secondary transactions are expected to remain the dominant exit mechanisms until broader capital market conditions improve.
India also added five new unicorns during the period, matching the pace seen last year despite the moderation in overall funding.
The decline in funding value should not be viewed as a slowdown in India's startup ecosystem. Instead, it reflects a structural shift towards disciplined investing, where venture capital firms are prioritising profitability, operational efficiency and long-term scalability over rapid valuation expansion.
The sharp increase in deal volume, continued investor participation and strong funding for AI, deeptech and growth-stage startups indicate that capital remains available for businesses with differentiated technology and sustainable business models. The reduction in late-stage funding is also encouraging startups to improve unit economics before raising larger funding rounds.
Looking ahead, sectors such as Artificial Intelligence, Deeptech, Semiconductor Technology, Enterprise SaaS, ClimateTech and Advanced Manufacturing are expected to remain the biggest investment themes in the second half of 2026. Improved IPO activity, easing global interest rates and stronger domestic economic growth could further support startup funding in the coming quarters.
| Highlights | Details |
|---|---|
| Total Startup Funding | $5.2 Billion |
| Total Deals | 501 |
| Funding Change | â–¼ 9% YoY |
| Deal Growth | â–² 7% YoY |
| AI Funding | â–² 317% YoY |
| Growth-Stage Funding | â–² 15% YoY |
| Seed Funding | â–² 18% YoY |
| Late-Stage Funding | â–¼ 27% YoY |
| Leading Startup Hub | Bengaluru |
| New Unicorns | 5 |
Indian startups raised $5.2 billion across 501 funding deals during the first half of 2026.
The decline was mainly due to fewer large late-stage funding rounds, while investors shifted towards smaller, quality investments in growth-stage and early-stage startups.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) emerged as the fastest-growing sector, recording a 317% year-on-year increase in funding.
Bengaluru remained India's leading startup hub, attracting $2.7 billion in funding during H1 2026.
Analysts expect AI, deeptech, semiconductor, enterprise software and advanced technology startups to continue attracting strong investor interest, while funding is likely to remain more disciplined and focused on sustainable growth.

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