After a quiet week that had investors pressing pause, Indian startup funding bounced back with renewed vigour. Between October 6 and 11, 26 startups collectively raised $284.6 million, marking a 78% surge from the $160.3 million raised by just 14 startups in the previous week. The rebound reflects strong investor confidence across fintech, AI, cleantech, and enterprise tech segments — signaling that India’s startup story is far from slowing down.

Fintech Leads The Charge With Dhan’s Unicorn Moment
The week’s biggest headline belonged to Dhan, which became India’s sixth unicorn of 2025 after raising a staggering $120 million Series B round led by Hornbill Capital and MUFG. The investment platform, known for its tech-driven approach to retail investing, was valued at $1.2 billion, cementing fintech’s status as the week’s top-funded sector.
Overall, fintech startups drew $146.5 million across just two deals, underlining the sector’s continued dominance. Alongside Dhan, Qapita, the Singapore-based equity management platform with a strong India presence, bagged $26.5 million in its Series B round led by Charles Schwab Corporation, with participation from Citi and MassMutual Ventures. The round also marked Qapita’s strategic push into the U.S. market.
AI Startups Dominate Deal Volume
If fintech ruled the money charts, AI ruled the deal count. A total of six AI startups collectively raised $24.5 million, spanning diverse applications from enterprise tools to generative AI.
Among the most notable were GreyLabs AI, which secured $10 million in Series A funding from Elevation Capital and Z47, and Lucio, which bagged $5 million in seed capital from DeVC and marquee angel investors Ashish Kacholia and Lashit Sanghvi.
Others like Reo.Dev, August AI, Finarkein Analytics, and Contrails AI also joined the funding fray, highlighting the sector’s growing appeal among investors eager to bet on India’s AI innovation wave.
Other Big Winners: Enterprise Tech, Foodtech & Web3
Beyond fintech and AI, the week saw action across a mix of sectors. Enterprise tech startup Intangles raised $30 million in a Series B round led by Avataar Venture Partners, while Rusk Media picked up $11.6 million from IvyCap Ventures and others to scale its digital entertainment offerings.
In the foodtech space, Hunger Inc, the parent company of Bombay Sweet Shop and The Bombay Canteen, attracted $25 million from Lighthouse and DSG Consumer Partners, marking one of the largest F&B deals of the quarter. Meanwhile, Web3 player KGen closed a $13.5 million round backed by Prosus, Jump Crypto, and Accel, signaling sustained investor faith in blockchain infrastructure startups.
Seed Stage Sees A Funding Boom
The early-stage ecosystem, often seen as a bellwether for innovation momentum, saw a dramatic uptick this week. Seed and pre-seed rounds totaled $24.6 million across 11 deals, a huge leap from just $3.1 million across four deals last week.
Notable among them was The Medical Travel Company, which raised $4.5 million in a seed round led by Nexus Venture Partners and joined by cricket stars like Ben Stokes, KL Rahul, and Jofra Archer. Other young ventures such as OZi (quick commerce), TrusTerra (ecommerce), and H2 Carbon Zero (climate tech) also attracted investor attention, suggesting a renewed appetite for early bets.
IPO Buzz: Lenskart & Wakefit Secure SEBI Nod
In the public markets, the week brought significant updates from IPO-bound heavyweights. Lenskart received SEBI’s approval for its ₹2,150 crore fresh issue and 13.2 crore-share OFS, while Wakefit got the green light for an issue of ₹468 crore plus an OFS component.
Meanwhile, WeWork India’s debut was muted, but Zappfresh had a stellar listing, reaffirming that investors are still hungry for profitable consumer brands.
Funds Flow Freely: VC Firms Launch New Vehicles
The venture capital ecosystem, too, stayed busy. Theia Ventures announced the first close of its maiden $30 million fund focused on early-stage startups. Aagama Ventures unveiled a ₹400 crore ($45 million) fintech fund, and Jamwant Ventures, in partnership with Aavishkaar Group, launched its second fund with a target of ₹500 crore ($60 million).
These developments underline a key message: while the funding landscape remains volatile, the ecosystem’s depth and diversity continue to expand.

The Bottom Line
From Dhan’s unicorn leap to a surge in AI and early-stage deals, the Indian startup ecosystem proved once again that resilience is its core strength. Despite global macro headwinds, investors continue to find India’s innovation pipeline irresistible — and this week’s numbers make that crystal clear.




