All Stories

Exclusive: Ownwell Lands $30M To Help Homeowners Lower Their Property Tax Bills

Ownwell, an AI-powered startup that appeals property taxes on behalf of homeowners, has secured $50 million in financing, including $30 million in equity and $20 million in debt, the company tells Crunchbase News exclusively. With the latest Series B raise, Austin-based Ownwell says it has now raised $54 million in total equity funding since its 2020 inception. Alpha Edison and Mercato Partners co-led its latest round, which included participation from Intuit Ventures, Left Lane Capital, First Round Capital, Long Journey Ventures, Proof Fund and Wonder Ventures. Western Alliance Bank provided the $20 million in debt financing. CEO Colton Pace said he and CTO Joseph Noor started Ownwell to “democratize access to the tools and resources real estate experts use to build wealth and financial freedom.” As a former asset manager, Pace said he worked for some of the wealthiest families and individuals in the world on the investment management side. Colton Pace and Joseph Noor, co-founders of Ownwell. (Courtesy photo) “I saw firsthand how billionaires manage their 28 homes and their apartment complexes and their retail across the country, and how everything is perfectly optimized,” he told Crunchbase News in an interview. “And so we built software for the purpose of providing tools for everyone, regardless of the value of their asset.” Ownwell launched for customers in 2021, initially handling the property-tax appeal process. Pace said its tech automates “complex steps and analyzes millions of local records” to surface the strongest case to present to local municipalities to argue for a lower home assessment and, in turn, a lower property tax bill. “We market to people that are typically very underserved,” Pace said. “That law firm down the street doesn’t want to help a $200,000 home [owner] appeal their property taxes. They want the skyscraper.” Pace claims that Ownwell is the only multistate company of its kind. It currently operates with local tax consultants in about a dozen states: Texas, New York, Florida, California, Illinois, Georgia, Washington, Maryland, Colorado, Arizona, Pennsylvania and Michigan. Part of the newly raised capital will go toward expanding to other markets, and “going deeper” into existing markets, he said. A million appeals Ownwell doesn’t charge customers unless it lowers their tax bill. Depending on the market, its contingency fee is 25% to 35% of the savings it earns for property owners. (The fee depends on its cost to operate in that market.) “The majority of homeowners do not appeal or even think to appeal, so bringing consistent awareness to this for the average homeowner is the biggest challenge,” Pace said. Recently, the company surpassed more than 1 million appeals processed, and says it has saved its customers over $400 million in property taxes. Over the years, Ownwell has expanded its offering to include helping people get property exemptions, compare insurance providers and explore refinancing options. The company is also integrated with Realtor.com, and has partnerships with Valon Technologies and Amplify Credit Union. Ownwell gets commissions from carriers or lenders that it refers homeowners to, similar to Credit Karma’s model, Pace said. The startup also markets a nationwide property tax packet to help people outside of the 12 states in which it is operating to file their own appeals. “We’re taking the internal data that we’ve collected over the past six years and over hundreds of thousands of appeals across the country, and figuring out what wins,” Pace told Crunchbase News. “We’re prompting AI tooling with all this proprietary data that we have to give customers a useful packet that basically is the ultimate ‘how to appeal’ in markets that we are not in yet.” Ownwell has over 500,000 customers, including residential and commercial property owners throughout the country, in addition to homeowners. Since inception, Ownwell has maintained an annual growth rate of over 100% every year, according to Pace. In 2025, it grew customers by over 180%. Pace said the company is currently profitable (both cash flow and net income positive) but “is prioritizing growth.” A ‘customer-obsessed experience in a much larger market’ In 2025, global real estate-related startups pulled in about $10.5 billion in seed- through growth-stage financing, per Crunchbase data. That’s up about 17% from $9 billion in 2024. For its part, Ownwell is not sharing its current valuation, with Pace saying only that it “has grown significantly from round to round.” Presently, it has 108 employees. Vinny Pujji, managing partner at Left Lane Capital, which led Ownwell’s Series A round, notes that he served on Truebill’s board during its $1.5 billion acquisition by Rocket. “I’ve seen firsthand that helping consumers save money never goes out of style,” he wrote via email. Ownwell, in Pujji’s view, has built a “customer-obsessed experience in a much larger market.” “With a tech-enabled agentic product built for complex, local markets, “the team has achieved something you rarely see: tripling customers served annually at scale.” In a blog post, Intuit Ventures said it was impressed with Pace’s vision “to help millions of homeowners and save money for the consumers who need it most.” The firm added: “We’re proud to support the Ownwell team as they continue to deliver a product that creates holistic, money-saving experiences for consumers.” Related Crunchbase queries: Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman

Innovation Is A Game Of Two Halves

Somewhere in the past 25 years, we began to confuse two things that are not the same. We started treating “innovation” as something that only happens in private markets, and “funding innovation” as a synonym for venture capital. The creation myth is familiar: founders in a garage, a seed check and then (many years, and many rounds later) an IPO that serves as a liquidity event for insiders. In this story, the public markets are where the startup goes to retire. But this is historically illiterate. Amazon went public in 1997, three years after founding, at a market cap of $438 million. It had $15.7 million in revenue. Nearly everything Amazon would become (the marketplace, AWS, the logistics empire) was built after it became a public company. The same is true of Microsoft, Cisco and Nvidia, the latter of which went public at under $1 billion and has since become the most valuable company on Earth. In the 1990s, the median tech company went public when it was 4 to 7 years old. Public investors didn’t buy the tail-end of innovation — they funded the vast majority of it. It remains true today. Just look at the “Magnificent 7.” Amazon vs. WeWork When the dot-com bubble burst, Amazon’s stock collapsed to single digits. That crisis forced Jeff Bezos to restructure the cash conversion cycle, close distribution centers and lay off 15% of staff. Amazon posted its first profitable quarter in Q4 2001. The public market’s ruthlessness was the forge that hardened the business model. Now compare this to what the “Private-for-Longer” era has produced. By 2024, the median VC-backed company went public at age 14, a full decade later than many 1990s counterparts. Shielded from quarterly accountability, short sellers and skeptical analysts, companies like WeWork accumulated $47 billion valuations while hiding behind metrics like “Community Adjusted EBITDA.” When WeWork finally tried to list, the market rejected it instantly. But by then, billions had been wasted. Private market opacity had delayed diagnosis until the rot was terminal. Discipline creates strength The data is damning across the board. The 2010–2020 cohort of VC-backed IPOs generated a negative 9.5% return relative to the S&P 500. In 2021, only 25% of IPOs were profitable. Instacart went public at a 77% discount to its 2021 valuation. Bird went bankrupt. The Renaissance IPO ETF fell over 50% from its peak. Meanwhile, Hamilton Lane’s research shows that roughly 90% of a company’s lifetime value creation now occurs in private markets, accessible only to institutional investors. The returns to innovation have been privatized while the risks have been socialized. The central paradox is that more private funding has not produced more innovation, it has simply inflated consensus. Abundant capital allowed “blitzscaling,” promoting growth over efficiency, far longer than the market would naturally tolerate. In the 1990s, a company could burn cash for three or four years before facing discipline. Today, it’s well over a decade and the result is companies that eventually go public with slower growth, less profit and greater risk. None of this means venture capital is unimportant. Early-stage risk absorption remains vital. But innovation is a lifecycle, and the lifecycle includes a public chapter that is not optional. What matters is the handoff, the transition from private incubation to public maturation, where ideas are tested, funded and held accountable by the broadest possible base of investors. The most consequential companies in technology history made that handoff early. The generation that delayed it has delivered the worst returns and the most spectacular failures. If innovation is the goal, the handoff matters. And we have been fumbling it. Dan Gray, a frequent guest author for Crunchbase News, is the research lead at Odin, a platform that allows VCs and angel syndicates to raise and deploy capital globally. Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman

Crunchbase Data: The AI Boom Has Drastically Changed Who’s Funding The Hottest Companies In 2025 Vs. 2021

As global venture funding in 2025 ratcheted up to the third-highest total on record after the peak years of 2021 and 2022, capital also concentrated further, with the number of companies raising rounds of $50 million or more drastically shrinking roughly by half to a cohort of just 1,440. The investors backing the hottest companies in this highly competitive venture capital market have also changed drastically since 2021, Crunchbase data shows. While private equity investors dominated during the pandemic boom, Silicon Valley’s traditional VC firms have reclaimed ground in leading rounds of $50 million and over, our analysis indicates. A review of Crunchbase data shows the extent to which peak-year investors such as Tiger Global Management and Insight Partners, both headquartered in New York, have ceded ground back to the big names of Silicon Valley. The firms that dominated in those larger financings in 2021 — when over $500 billion in capital went toward deals of $50 million or more — were private equity and alternative investors. At that time, the two firms topping the list were 4x more active by counts when compared to those at the top two slots in 2025. In 2025, by contrast, venture capital firms dominated the list of most-active leads in those larger financings with eight of the 10 most active being VCs. Last year, roughly $300 billion went to $50 million-plus deals. In 2021, the top 20 firms leading rounds north of $5 billion were predominantly private equity. But in 2025 a smaller cohort of investors, 10 in total, each led or co-led rounds totaling $5 billion. That included five private equity or alternative investors; three venture capital firms, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Andreessen Horowitz and Accel;  and more active corporate strategic investors with Meta and SpaceX joining the top 10, each with a single outsized investment. Private equity was also still active in leading by dollar volume in 2025, though less dominant. PE leaned in One year into COVID, as digital services took off, global venture funding doubled to $702 billion. And the most-active investors in the largest rounds invested at an unprecedented pace. The top five most-active investors in $50 million-plus rounds were all private equity firms, including Insight Partners, which operates as both venture capital and private equity. But the majority of these active investors have scaled back counts significantly at this size in 2025. Leading the list, Tiger Global Management and the SoftBank Vision Fund have cut back more than 95% by count. Insight Partners, Coatue, Temasek Holdings and General Atlantic, while still active in 2025, led or co-led fewer deals last year, by as much as 75%. Of the seven venture capital firms that make this list, two firms — Andreessen Horowitz and Index Ventures — noticeably cut back deal counts by 35% and 60%, respectively, in 2025. Venture capital more active in 2025 In 2025, by contrast, the most active in $50 million-plus deal counts were largely venture capital firms. However, counts by the leading firms were far lower than in 2021 with 30 at the top of the list compared to 182. General Catalyst has the highest count at 30, followed by a16z at 24, and Lightspeed and Accel matching at 22. Each of these firms was slightly more active in leading deals in 2021 compared to 2025, while Lightspeed Venture Partners counts match 2021. A host of venture capital firms have increased counts by more than 100% at this size including Khosla Ventures, New Enterprise Associates, Google Ventures, Menlo Ventures, Eclipse Ventures and Balderton. The firms also were all up by more than 100% in led or co-led counts when compared to 2021 for deals at this size, along with one private equity firm Forbion Capital Partners, which invests largely in biotech. Dollar volume in 2021 Of the 21 most-active firms in 2021 by led or co-led deal amounts north of $4.8 billion, 18 were private equity firms and three were venture capital firms. However, the largest funding deal that year — a $3.6 billion funding to Flipkart led by SoftBank Vision Fund, GIC, CPP Investments and Walmart — was much smaller than the largest deal in 2025. Not surprisingly, the firms that led or co-led the largest rounds in 2021 were SoftBank Vision Fund and Tiger Global Management. Coatue, D1 Capital Partners and Temasek round out the top five, all down by more than 75% when compared to 2025. Three venture firms make the list of investors leading the largest rounds. The most-active venture firm, Sequoia Capital, cut back on amounts led or co-led by more than 50%, while Ribbit Capital cut back by more than 75%. The other venture firm to make this list, Andreessen Horowitz, led or co-led more by dollar amounts in 2025 compared to 2021. New guard in 2025 In 2025, the largest deals were much larger, in the tens of billions of dollars rather than the single-digit billions seen in 2021, with the five leading investors propelled to the top of the list due to a single deal at $10 billion and above. SoftBank topped the list in 2025, leading the $40 billion funding to OpenAI. It was followed by Meta, which led the $14.3 billion funding to Scale AI. Lightspeed, Fidelity and Iconiq Capital co-led the $13 billion funding to Anthropic. The top five firms leading by amount in 2025 all led individual deals north of $10 billion. Of the 27 firms most active by deal amounts led in 2025, four were strategic investors, nine were venture capital firms, and 14 were either  private equity or alternative investors. Looking forward An analysis of Crunchbase data makes it clear: Venture capital has reclaimed its lead in this AI wave, as private equity, overindexed in private companies, has scaled back significantly since 2021. In 2025, large rounds and valuations picked up once again, setting the stage for a very active funding environment in 2026. Despite the shift from private equity to multistage venture actively leading the largest deals, the question remains: Will this new cohort of highly valued companies deliver outsized returns in the coming years? Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman

Digital Savings Startup Vestwell Lands $385M, Doubles Valuation

Vestwell, a digital savings platform, has raised $385 million in a Series E funding round co-led by Blue Owl Capital and Sixth Street Growth. The New York-based startup says its new valuation is $2 billion, double the $1 billion valuation it achieved when raising its $125 million Series D round in December 2023. In total, Vestwell says it has raised $660 million in capital since its 2016 inception. Also participating in the latest round were Neuberger Berman, Silver Lake Waterman, Morgan Stanley, Franklin Templeton, TIAA Ventures and HarbourVest Partners. Aaron Schumm, founder and CEO of Vestwell. (Courtesy photo) Vestwell is growing “profitably,” according to CEO Aaron Schumm, who said the company’s annual recurring revenue is now more than $200 million. The platform has more than 2 million active savers and works with more than 500,000 businesses. In total, Vestwell has over $50 billion in assets administered across workplace, institutional and government channels. The company grew nearly 50% year over year, Schumm said, and is operating with “strong unit economics and improving margins.” Vestwell’s revenue model is dependent on its customers and their preferred structure, according to Schumm. Typically, it’s a monthly fee per employer and/or a monthly fee per employee. The company works with financial institutions, payroll and HR platforms to distribute or integrate its white-labeled savings products to employers and employees nationwide. Those partners include Assure, BambooHR, Deel, Franklin Templeton, Intuit QuickBooks, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Paylocity, Rippling, Square and Toast. Overall funding to wealth management startups totaled $1.9 billion in 2025, per Crunchbase data, roughly the same amount as in 2024. That’s down from about $3.8 billion raised by such startups in the peak funding year of 2021. Connecting the dots Schumm founded Vestwell with the goal of addressing the problem of “fragmented” savings. “[There were] separate systems for retirement, emergency, education, disability and other savings programs. Each had its own rules, vendors and barriers to participation,” he said. “Vestwell solves that problem by connecting these programs into one interoperable platform.” Describing the company as an enterprise fintech platform, he said Vestwell makes it easier for employees and employers “to save, manage and grow their money, no matter the size of the company.” It supports a range of savings vehicles, including retirement: 401(k), 403(b) and IRA savings programs; education such as 529 savings plans; emergency savings accounts; and ABLE accounts for people with disabilities. Its offering is accessible across more than 20 languages. Presently, Vestwell has 500 employees. Expansion plans The company plans to use its new capital to expand its distribution. For example, it is working to embed savings more deeply into payroll, benefits platforms, financial institutions and government-led public programs. It’s also continuing to invest in AI-native capabilities with the goal of having them personalize guidance, automate administration and surface “actionable” insights for users and their employers. Before Vestwell, Schumm co-founded wealth management startup FolioDynamix, which was acquired by Envestnet in 2017 for $195 million. Tim DeGrange, principal at Blue Owl, describes Vestwell as “a standout company.” “Vestwell is taking a holistic approach to savings, making it far more durable than just a recordkeeping platform,” he wrote via email. “It has created the infrastructure layer that connects payroll providers, financial advisors, enterprises and state programs into a unified savings ecosystem.” Related Crunchbase Pro query: Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman Clarification: This story has changed since its original publication to confirm the company’s current valuation.

Biotech Startup M&A Is Reliably Delivering Some Big Exits

In a world where AI unicorns are securing valuations in the tens and hundreds of billions of dollars, biotech startups can’t compete for giant rounds. But while the space may be lower-profile, it’s still steadily generating M&A outcomes that look high by other historic standards. Over the past two calendar years, acquirers have agreed to pay more than $38 billion to purchase 1 venture-backed companies in Crunchbase biotech industry categories. So far, 2026 is off to a brisk start as well, with Eli Lilly agreeing this month to pay up to $2.4 billion for Orna Therapeutics, a startup focused on engineering immune cells in vivo. Per Crunchbase data, 2025 and 2024 were two of the strongest years on record for biotech M&A. While we’re still below the 2021 peak, we’re also well past the subsequent low point, as charted below. Largest deals in recent quarters Since last year, at least nine funded U.S. biotech companies have sold in transactions valued at $1 billion or more, including potential milestone payments. Using Crunchbase data, we assembled a list, ranked by deal size. The largest deal was Johnson & Johnson’s purchase of Halda Therapeutics, a developer of targeted oral therapies for solid tumors, for $3.05 billion in cash late last year. The pharma giant expressed particular interest in adding Halda’s clinical stage oral therapy for prostate cancer to its portfolio. The two next-biggest acquisitions were both in the area of in vivo therapeutics, which enable a patient’s own body to generate cell therapies that can treat underlying disease. One was Lilly’s aforementioned purchase of Watertown, Massachusetts-based Orna, which had  previously raised over $320 million in venture funding from lead backers including Merck, F2 Ventures and MPM Capital. The other was AbbVie’s mid-2025 acquisition of Capstan Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biotech developing targeted in vivo RNA technologies, with an initial focus on autoimmune diseases. AbbVie agreed to pay up to $2.1 billion in cash to acquire the San Diego-based startup,which previously raised $340 million in venture funding. Biotech funding share slides, and IPO volume remains weak While some large acquisitions are happening, the overall picture for biotech funding and exit activity looks more muted. Last year, less than 9% of all U.S. startup funding went to companies in Crunchbase biotech categories. That’s the lowest share in years, and largely a function of more capital going to companies in other hot sectors like generative AI. In terms of total finding, biotech looks more stable. In 2025, just over $25 billion went to U.S. startups in the space, roughly flat year over year. IPO activity is lower than usual. Last year, just 21 biotech, pharma or medical device companies went public, per Crunchbase data, the lowest number in years. So far this year, we’ve had four debuts, including most recently the debut this month of Eikon Therapeutics, a developer of cancer therapies recently valued around $900 million. Not a slump, and not a boom Overall, biotech funding and exit data paints a picture of a sector that’s neither booming nor in a protracted slump. That’s not the most exciting place to be, but it can be quite viable for quite a long time. Related Crunchbase query: Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman

Only 2 States Saw Their Share Of US Venture Funding Rise Last Year

A rising tide may lift all boats. But lately it lifts California boats the most. In 2025, only two states with a sizable venture scene saw a year-over-year gain in their share of U.S. venture funding: California and Washington. This held true even though several others, including New York and Texas, actually saw a pretty big bump in investment. What gives? Well, last year saw a dramatic upward swing in North American venture investment, with annual startup funding up 46%. Artificial intelligence was the driver, with most investment going to companies in AI-related categories. Not all geographies benefited equally. Across all categories, California drew the largest share of investment, at 64%. The next runners-up were New York, Massachusetts and Texas. Overall, there were six states that captured 2% or more of U.S. venture funding last year, per Crunchbase data. That’s a small group, but it’s not too atypical, as a few hubs reliably attract virtually all the capital. To illustrate, we charted how investment share for the top six states breaks down over the past two calendar years. Funding also rose year-over-year for each of the six states, as we chart below.   Deals and sectors that drove gains, by state Leading sectors and rounds varied broadly by state. We previously covered the California companies whose huge funding hauls drove gains. Here are leaders in the other top states: New York: For the second-largest funding hub, two of last year’s biggest funding rounds went to predictions marketplaces Polymarket and Kalshi. AI coding startup Reflection AI and food delivery provider Wonder were also investor favorites. Massachusetts: The Boston area is known for its deep-tech prowess, and this showed up in the funding tallies. Fusion energy pioneer Commonwealth Fusion was the biggest funding recipient, followed by BrainCo, a developer of brain-computer interfaces, and Kailera Therapeutics, which is focused on weight loss drugs. Texas: Austin companies topped the list for Texas funding rounds last year. This included Base Power, a provider of residential backup battery systems, and Saronic, a developer of autonomous naval and maritime vessels. Washington: The Pacific Northwest powerhouse has a fairly diversified startup scene, as evidenced by the largest funding recipients.These include nuclear power company TerraPower, and reusable rocket developer Stoke Space. Colorado: There’s very little snow in Colorado this winter, but plenty of capital has accumulated. Lead funding recipients include AI infrastructure company Crusoe, which secured a $1.4 billion Series E in October, and quantum computing startup Quantinuum, which raised a $600 million Series B. Other states OK, so you may have noticed that there are 44 other states we didn’t discuss and which also do attract some startup investment. This includes five that are under 2% of national funding but still pulled in over $2 billion last year:  Florida, Pennsylvania, Illinois, North Carolina and Virginia. Seven others — Utah, Tennessee, Maryland, Ohio, Minnesota, Georgia and New Jersey — attracted $1 billion or more in startup funding last year and most saw year-over-year gains. But because venture is so heavily concentrated elsewhere, these 12 states only drew about 11% of all nationwide investment.  Catalysts for change? There’s no law, of course, that says venture investment must remain so geographically concentrated. Certainly there are base characteristics that make for a sustainable startup hub, including well-regarded research universities and a concentration of tech and biotech talent and employers. But a number of places meet these baselines, making them potentially fertile ground for greater investment. Of late, however, capital seems to continue to concentrate on bold new ventures in the biggest existing hubs. Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman

The Week’s 10 Biggest Funding Rounds: Anthropic Leads In A Big Week For Giant Rounds

Want to keep track of the largest startup funding deals in 2025 with our curated list of $100 million-plus venture deals to U.S.-based companies? Check out The Crunchbase Megadeals Board. This is a weekly feature that runs down the week’s top 10 announced funding rounds in the U.S. Check out last week’s biggest funding deal roundup here. This week featured a lot of funding deals with a lot of zeroes on the end. Generative AI powerhouse Anthropic, of course, boasted the most zeroes with its $30 billion Series G, the second-largest venture funding round of all time. Other big fundraisers included robotics startup Apptronik, fusion innovator Inertia Enterprises, and space tech unicorn Axiom Space. 1. Anthropic, $30B, Generative AI: Anthropic raised $30 billion in a massive Series G funding round that values the San Francisco-based generative AI company at $380 billion post-money. The financing marks the largest venture funding deal of 2026 so far and the second-largest of all time, per Crunchbase data. GIC and Coatue led the raise, which was also “co-led” by D.E. Shaw & Co. Ventures, Dragoneer Investment Group, Founders Fund, Iconiq Capital and MGX, according to the company. 2. Apptronik, $520M, humanoid robots: AI-powered robotics company Apptronik added $520 million in new financing in an extension of its $415 million Series A raise in February 2025, The investment brings the total round to over $935 million for the Austin-based company. 3. Inertia Enterprises, $450M, fusion energy: Livermore, California-based fusion power startup Inertia Enterprises announced that it secured $450 million in Series A funding. Bessemer Venture Partners led the round for the 2-year-old company, joined by Google Ventures, Threshold and other backers. 4. Axiom Space, $350M, space tech: Axiom Space, a startup that is building a successor to the International Space Station and developing spacesuits for a moon mission, closed on $350 million in new financing. Type One Ventures and Qatar Investment Authority led the round for the Houston-based company. 5. Runway, $315M, AI: Runway, an AI research and technology startup, picked up $315 million in a Series E round. General Atlantic led the financing, which set a $5.3 billion valuation for the New York-based company, up from $3.3 billion last April. 6. Talkiatry, $210M, mental health: Talkiatry, a provider of in-network psychiatry services to health systems and employers, picked up $210 million in Series D funding, led by Perceptive Advisors. The round brings total funding to date for the New York-based company to more than $400 million. 7. Solace Health, $130M, healthcare: Redwood City, California-based Solace Health, a digital platform that connects patients with expert healthcare advocates, raised $130 million in Series C funding. IVP led the financing, which set a valuation of over $1 billion for the 4-year-old company. 8. Garner Health, $118M, healthcare: Garner Health, a digital platform that helps patients find healthcare providers, raised $118 million in Series D financing. Kleiner Perkins led the round for the New York-based company. 9. (tied) Simile, $100M, AI simulation: Palo Alto, California-based Simile, a startup focused on applying AI to create simulated environments and simulation tools with AI agents, raised $100 million in Series A funding led by Index Ventures. 9. (tied) Loyal, $100M, dog longevity: Loyal, a startup focused on drugs to extend healthy lifespans in senior dogs, raised $100 million in Series C funding that it says will provide the capital required to move from late-stage development to market readiness. Venture fund Age1 led the financing for the 7-year-old, San Francisco-based company. Methodology We tracked the largest announced rounds in the Crunchbase database that were raised by U.S.-based companies for the period of Feb. 7-13. Although most announced rounds are represented in the database, there could be a small time lag as some rounds are reported late in the week. Illustration: Dom Guzman

January Delivers Highest New Unicorn Count In More Than 3 Years

A total of 31 companies joined The Crunchbase Unicorn Board in January, the largest count of companies to join in a single month since June 2022. Collectively, those companies added $9.3 billion in funding and $58.5 billion in value to the board. And underlining the pace at which some startups are now sprinting to billion-dollar-plus valuations, four of the new unicorns are less than a year old. In exit news, 9-year-old fintech unicorn Brex was acquired by Capital One for $5.2 billion. That’s well below its January 2022 valuation of $12.3 billion but still marks a win for earlier investors seeking liquidity. Of the 31 companies that joined the board, 23 are U.S.-based and two hail from Canada. Germany, France, Belgium, Israel, Japan and India each added one new unicorn to the board last month. Among sectors, AI and AI infrastructure contributed the most new unicorns, totaling nine from those two areas. The next-leading sectors, with three new unicorns each, were manufacturing and security propelled by AI. AI was also a major contributor to new unicorns in the semiconductor, defense and autonomous driving sectors. The largest funding last month for a unicorn company was $20 billion to Elon Musk’s xAI at an estimated value of $230 billion. Within a month of that funding, xAI in early February announced a merger with another Musk-led company, rocketmaker SpaceX. 11 exits Brex’s acquisition by Capital One was the largest of the four M&A deals for unicorn-valued companies in January. On the IPO side, seven companies went public, the most high-profile of which were MiniMax and Z.ai, both foundation AI model companies based in China. Here are January’s newly minted unicorns. AI AI infrastructure Manufacturing Security Semiconductor Cryptocurrency Healthcare Defense Fintech Fitness Autonomous Driving Social media Education Compliance Energy Related Crunchbase unicorn lists: Related reading: Methodology The Crunchbase Unicorn Board is a curated list that includes private unicorn companies with post-money valuations of $1 billion or more and is based on Crunchbase data. New companies are added to the Unicorn Board as they reach the $1 billion valuation mark as part of a funding round. The unicorn board does not reflect internal company valuations — such as those set via a 409a process for employee stock options — as these differ from, and are more likely to be lower than, a priced funding round. We also do not adjust valuations based on investor writedowns, which change quarterly, as different investors will not value the same company consistently within the same quarter. Funding to unicorn companies includes all private financings to companies that are tagged as unicorns, as well as those that have since graduated to The Exited Unicorn Board. Exits analyzed here only include the first time a company exits. Please note that all funding values are given in U.S. dollars unless otherwise noted. Crunchbase converts foreign currencies to U.S. dollars at the prevailing spot rate from the date funding rounds, acquisitions, IPOs and other financial events are reported. Even if those events were added to Crunchbase long after the event was announced, foreign currency transactions are converted at the historic spot price. Illustration: Dom Guzman

Anthropic Raises $30B At $380B Valuation In Second-Largest Venture Funding Deal Of All Time

Generative AI company Anthropic announced Thursday that it raised $30 billion in a massive Series G funding round that values it at $380 billion post-money. The financing marks the largest venture funding deal of 2026 so far and the second-largest of all time, per Crunchbase data, following only rival OpenAI’s $40 billion funding in 2025. GIC and Coatue led the raise, which was also “co-led” by D.E. Shaw & Co. Ventures, Dragoneer Investment Group, Founders Fund, Iconiq Capital and MGX, according to the company. A slew of other backers participated in the round as well, and included previously announced investments from Microsoft and Nvidia. With this round, San Francisco-based Anthropic has now raised nearly $64 billion since its 2021 inception, per Crunchbase. The Claude chatbot developer remains the second-most highly valued generative AI startup behind rival OpenAI, which in October secured financing at a $500 billion valuation. Anthropic is also the fourth-most highly valued private company in the world, per Crunchbase data. It and OpenAI are reportedly both considering IPOs this year. Anthropic’s growth Anthropic says its run-rate revenue is now over $14 billion, a figure it claims grew over 10x annually in each of the past three years since it “earned its first dollar in revenue.” The number of customers spending over $100,000 annually on Claude (as represented by run-rate revenue) has grown 7x in the past year, the company added. Anthropic says the investment will fuel frontier research, product development and infrastructure expansions. “Whether it is entrepreneurs, startups, or the world’s largest enterprises, the message from our customers is the same: Claude is increasingly becoming more critical to how businesses work,” said Krishna Rao, Anthropic’s chief financial officer, in a statement. “This fundraising reflects the incredible demand we are seeing from these customers, and we will use this investment to continue building the enterprise-grade products and models they have come to depend on.” Chris Emanuel, head of the technology investment group at GIC, said in a statement that his firm believes that “Anthropic’s thoughtful approach to AI development is changing the way enterprises operate.” He added: “Our partnership and continued investment reflects our conviction in their visionary leadership team and technical depth as they expand access to advanced AI tools.” Related Crunchbase queries: Related reading: Illustration: Dom Guzman
<