weekly funding roundup india

Source: Scripbox

In the third week of September, there was an uptick in venture capital (VC) funding into Indian startups, aided primarily by a larger set of late-stage deals. In the period under review, startups raised $245 million across 19 deals as compared to $146 million of the previous week.

This is a good sign for the Indian startup ecosystem, that has had weekly funding relatively flat at about $100 million over the last three weeks. The increase was primarily driven by the growth and late-stage deals, which, while fewer in number but high in value. Funding to sectors included fintech, electric vehicles, B2B services, consumer electronics, and direct-to-consumer brands.

Since July, VC funding in India has been sluggish, typically averaging weekly investments of $100–200 million. While 2025 will most likely end up raising similar amounts as 2024, this recent merger may lead to a more active funding environment in the coming weeks and months.

Important Investments

Infra. Market, a startup that sells construction materials, received ₹732 crore (~$83 million) in investment from a variety of investors, such as Nikhil Kamath, NKSquared, Silverline Homes, Tiger Global, Accel, and Evolvence India.

FinBox, a fintech startup, raised $40 million in funding from WestBridge Capital, A91 Partners, and Aditya Birla Ventures.

Blue Energy Motors, an electric vehicle startup, has raised $30 million from Nikhil Kamath and Omnitex Industries. 

Indkal Technologies, a consumer electronics startup, has raised $20 million in Series B bridge funding from existing investors.

EcoSoul Home, a D2C brand that received $20 million from Accel, Bajaj Financial Securities, StartupXseed Ventures, JSW Ventures, CK Birla Group, and Singh Capital Partners. 

Lucira Jewelry raised $5.5 million from Blume Ventures, Spring Marketing Capital, SiriusOne Capital Fund and angel investors. 

Pelocal, a financial technology company, raised $5 million from UNLEASH Capital Partners, Unicorn India Ventures, and some angel investors.

SpaceFields, a space technology company, raised ₹42 crore (about $4.7 million) from Globaz Technologies, Rockstud Capital, Venture Catalysts, and Rainmatter.

Projections for the Future  

The increase in late-stage funding is positive for startups in India. While we expect total funding for 2025 to be comparable to 2022 or 2023, the larger value deals are a reflection of the fact that investors still have confidence in growth-stage startups. Many believe this will continue, which would aid the overall funding environment across sectors and stages.