India’s startup ecosystem witnessed a significant funding resurgence this week, with startups collectively raising $426 million across 19 deals between June 15 and June 19. The amount marks a sharp jump from the $243 million secured through 25 deals in the previous week, signaling renewed investor confidence in high-growth sectors despite ongoing global economic uncertainties.
The week belonged to artificial intelligence, with AI startups attracting the lion’s share of capital and reinforcing the belief that the next phase of India’s startup boom could be driven by AI innovation.

Sarvam’s Mega Round Steals The Spotlight
The biggest highlight of the week was AI startup Sarvam, which raised a massive $234 million in its Series B funding round. Led by HCLTech and backed by prominent investors such as Bessemer Venture Partners, Khosla Ventures, and Peak XV Partners, the round stands among the largest ever secured by an Indian AI startup.
Sarvam’s fundraising success underscores the growing appetite for indigenous AI models and foundational AI technologies. As countries increasingly focus on developing sovereign AI capabilities, startups like Sarvam are emerging as critical players in shaping India’s AI ambitions.
The funding round alone accounted for more than half of the total capital raised during the week, making Sarvam the undisputed star of the funding charts.
AI Emerges As Investors’ Favourite Sector
Artificial intelligence dominated funding activity, attracting more than $265 million across five startups. Besides Sarvam, investors also backed application-layer AI startups such as Pramaana Labs, ContraVault, and Tringbox.
Pramaana Labs raised $27 million in a seed round from an impressive group of investors including Khosla Ventures, Accel, Nexus Venture Partners, Premji Invest, and BoldCap. The size of the round highlights the growing investor confidence in AI startups even at an early stage.
The strong flow of capital into AI indicates that investors are increasingly betting on startups building practical AI solutions rather than simply experimenting with the technology.
Cleantech Continues To Gain Momentum
While AI dominated headlines, cleantech emerged as the second-most funded sector during the week.
SolarSquare secured $53 million in a Series C funding round led by Lightspeed, making it the second-largest deal of the week. Meanwhile, Karo Sambhav raised $5.9 million in a Pre-Series A round backed by Rainmatter.
Together, the two startups attracted nearly $59 million, highlighting the growing interest in climate-focused businesses. With sustainability becoming a priority for governments, enterprises, and consumers alike, investors appear increasingly willing to support startups building solutions in renewable energy, recycling, and climate technology.
Healthcare And Consumer Brands Also Attract Capital
Healthcare startup Vetic raised an impressive $40 million, making it one of the week’s largest funding rounds. The investment reflects growing investor interest in healthcare delivery models that blend physical infrastructure with technology.
Consumer-focused startups also remained active. TruNativ secured $30 million in a Series B round, while Foodstories raised $5.2 million from Zerodha cofounder Nikhil Kamath.
Several ecommerce startups, including Gimi Michi, Speedioo, and Xtovia, also secured fresh capital, demonstrating that investors continue to see opportunities in consumer brands despite intense competition across the sector.
Seed Funding Sees A Decline
Interestingly, seed-stage funding witnessed a notable slowdown. Early-stage startups raised only $7.8 million across five deals this week, compared to $22.3 million raised through five deals in the previous week.
The decline suggests that investors may currently be focusing on larger, more established startups with clearer growth trajectories and stronger revenue visibility.
Beyond Funding: IPOs, Acquisitions And Big Bets
The week also saw significant developments beyond fundraising.
Jio Platforms filed its draft papers for a highly anticipated public listing, while ecommerce unicorn BRND.ME, formerly Mensa Brands, transitioned into a public limited company as it prepares for an IPO within the next 18 months.
On the mergers and acquisitions front, global beauty giant L’Oreal signed an agreement to acquire a majority stake in Innovist, highlighting growing international interest in India’s consumer startup ecosystem.
Meanwhile, reports of Meta exploring an investment in fintech unicorn CRED and IFC committing $371 million toward AI-ready data centres in India further demonstrated the increasing flow of capital into the country’s digital infrastructure and technology sectors.

The Road Ahead
This week’s funding surge reflects a broader shift in investor priorities. Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming the centerpiece of startup investing, while sectors such as cleantech, healthcare, and digital infrastructure continue to attract strong interest.
With mega rounds returning, IPO pipelines expanding, and strategic acquisitions gaining pace, India’s startup ecosystem appears to be entering the second half of 2026 with renewed momentum and optimism.




