ADVERTISEMENT

India remained the world’s fourth-highest funded startup ecosystem in FY25-26, attracting $11.7 billion across 1,632 funding rounds, according to the Tracxn Geo Annual Report: India Tech FY25-26 released on Tuesday.
The report by startup intelligence platform Tracxn said India continued to rank behind only the US, UK, and China in startup funding during the financial year ended March 31, 2026.
While total funding fell 18% from $14.3 billion in the previous fiscal, it was still 20% higher than the FY24 trough, indicating a measured recovery. The report said deal volumes fell 34%, much sharper than the decline in capital deployed, suggesting investors are making fewer but higher-conviction investments rather than exiting the market.
Neha Singh, Co-Founder of Tracxn, said the data reflects a deliberate recalibration in India’s startup ecosystem. “When deal volume falls 34% but funding declines only 18%, it shows investors are not leaving — they are choosing differently. Rising IPO activity and a 50% increase in new unicorns indicate a more mature, fundamentals-driven ecosystem capable of creating durable value,” she said.
Early-stage funding rose 33% to $4.8 billion despite fewer rounds, while late-stage funding declined 38%. Enterprise Applications led sectoral funding with $3.6 billion, followed by FinTech and Retail at $2.4 billion each.
The largest funding rounds during the year included Nxtra ($710 million), Neysa ($600 million), and Inox Clean Energy ($344 million), reflecting strong investor appetite for infrastructure-led opportunities.
India’s startup ecosystem also saw a record 47 technology IPOs in FY26, up 52% year-on-year and the highest ever for the country’s tech sector.
Here are the key listings: Lenskart – $7.9 billion market capitalisation at IPO, Groww – $7.0 billion, Meesho – $5.6 billion, and Physics Wallah – $3.6 billion.
Retail led the IPO tally with 15 listings, followed by Enterprise Applications with 11. Late-stage IPOs accounted for 44% of equity-funded listings, up from 36% in the previous year, indicating investor preference for scaled and revenue-generating businesses.
India added six new unicorns in FY26 — Neysa, Raise, Navi, Jumbotail, JSW One MSME, and Juspay — marking a 50% increase over the four unicorns created in FY25.
India’s cumulative unicorn count now stands at 125, making it the third-largest unicorn ecosystem globally. Bengaluru leads with 53 unicorns, followed by Mumbai and Gurugram with 20 each. Together, these three cities account for over 74 per cent of India’s unicorn base.
However, profitability remains a challenge. Of 94 private unicorns with available financial data, only 17 are currently profitable.
A survey of around 30 India-focused venture capital investors found that 74% expect market conditions to improve in 2026.
Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning and Deep Tech were identified as the top sector priorities, with 71 per cent of respondents favouring each category. Among deployment themes, Vertical AI emerged as the most preferred area at 79%, followed by Enterprise AI at 54%.