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How to Raise Funding in India: The Complete 2025 Guide







 

 
 

Startup & Finance

 
 
 

Updated March 2026  ·  12 min read  ·  Expert Guide

How to Raise
Funding in India

The definitive 2025–26 playbook for Indian founders — from your first angel cheque to Series C and beyond. Real data, proven frameworks, and the government schemes most founders leave on the table.

India Raised in 2025
$10.5 Billion
Registered Startups
1,57,000+
Unicorns
100+
Global Rank
#3 Ecosystem

$16.1B
VC Funding in 2024
1,518
Funding Deals in 2025
42
Tech IPOs in 2025
₹10,000Cr
Govt. Fund of Funds Corpus

India’s startup ecosystem is the world’s third-largest, with over 1.57 lakh DPIIT-recognised startups, 100+ unicorns, and billions of dollars flowing from both domestic and global investors every year. Whether you’re pre-revenue or scaling to Series C, this guide tells you exactly how to raise money — and how to avoid the pitfalls that kill most fundraising attempts.

Why 2025–26 Is a Pivotal Time to Raise

India raised $10.5 billion in startup funding in 2025, maintaining its position as the world’s third-largest startup ecosystem despite global macro headwinds. While deal count fell roughly 39% year-on-year due to increased investor selectivity, early-stage funding actually rose 7% to $3.9 billion — a signal that patient capital is still hungry for quality founders.

According to TechCrunch’s year-end review, 42 Indian tech companies went public in 2025, up 17% from 36 the prior year, with demand increasingly driven by domestic institutional and retail investors. Meanwhile, domestic venture funds now control nearly 45% of startup funding, up from 28% in 2020 — meaning your path to capital no longer necessarily runs through Silicon Valley.

“We don’t yet have an AI-first company in India at $40–$50M of revenue in a year’s time frame, and that is globally happening.”

— Prayank Swaroop, Partner at Accel India

The key shift: investors are rewarding profitability over growth at all costs. Startups demonstrating clear unit economics are securing capital at healthy valuations; those without are facing down-rounds or bridge financing. This makes 2025–26 the era of the “fundamentals-first” fundraise.

India Startup Funding Trend (2021–2025, $Billion)
Source: Tracxn, Inc42, TechCrunch, Bloomberg (2024–2025 data)
 
Total Funding ($B)
Early-Stage ($B)

Funding Stages Explained: From Idea to IPO

Every funding round serves a different purpose and attracts a different type of investor. Understanding which stage you’re at — and what investors expect at that stage — is the single most important factor in whether you get a term sheet.

StageTicket Size (India)Investor TypeWhat They Expect
Pre-Seed₹10L – ₹1CrFriends & Family, FFF, IncubatorsFounder credibility, idea validation
Seed₹50L – ₹5Cr ($500K–$2M)Angel investors, Angel networks, Early-stage VCsMVP, early traction, market size
Series A₹15Cr – ₹100Cr ($2M–$15M)VC firms (Sequoia, Accel, Blume)Product-market fit, revenue, repeatable sales
Series B₹100Cr – ₹500Cr ($15M–$60M)Growth-stage VCs, PE firmsProven unit economics, scale evidence
Series C+₹500Cr+ ($60M+)Late-stage VCs, Hedge funds, Sovereign WealthMarket leadership, clear path to profitability/IPO
IPO₹1,000Cr+ ($120M+)Public markets, SEBI-listed exchangesAudited financials, profitability or clear path

Only about 46% of seed-funded startups go on to raise Series A, according to CB Insights. The “Series A crunch” is real — founders who hit it are usually those who optimised for raising money, not for building a fundamentally sound business first.

Types of Funding Sources in India

👼

Angel Investors

High-net-worth individuals who invest personal capital at seed stage. Key networks: Indian Angel Network (IAN), Mumbai Angels, Lead Angels, Chennai Angels, LetsVenture. Typical cheque: ₹25L–₹2Cr.

🏦

Venture Capital Firms

Professional investment funds for high-growth startups. Domestic leaders include Blume Ventures, Kalaari Capital, Chiratae Ventures. Global: Sequoia (Peak XV), Accel, Lightspeed.

🏛️

Government Schemes

SIDBI Fund of Funds, Startup India Seed Fund (SISFS), Credit Guarantee Scheme (CGSS), Atal Innovation Mission. Often overlooked but non-dilutive or very founder-friendly.

🌐

Crowdfunding & Venture Debt

Equity crowdfunding (SEBI-registered platforms), revenue-based financing, venture debt from Trifecta Capital, InnoVen Capital, Stride Ventures. Great for capital without heavy dilution.

🚀

Accelerators & Incubators

Y Combinator (accepts Indian startups), 100X.VC, Nasscom Startup Warehouse, IIT-TBI, IIM incubators. They provide equity, mentorship and crucial networks. About 2% acceptance rate.

🏢

Corporate Venture Capital

Arms of large corporates — Tata Digital, Reliance Jio Platforms, Kotak Mahindra, HDFC. Growing rapidly. CVC accounted for 40% of all global rounds above $50M in 2024.

Government Schemes Every Indian Founder Must Know

The Government of India has committed over ₹6,886 crore to SIDBI under the Fund of Funds scheme, which has catalysed investments of ₹21,276 crore in 1,173 startups as of December 2024. These are real, accessible programmes — yet most founders don’t apply because they don’t know they exist.

FFS

Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS)

Managed by SIDBI with a ₹10,000 crore corpus. Provides capital to SEBI-registered AIFs that fund startups via direct equity and equity-linked instruments.

₹21,276 Cr catalysed → 1,173 startups as of Dec 2024
SISFS

Startup India Seed Fund Scheme (SISFS)

₹945 crore outlay for proof-of-concept, prototype, product trials and market entry. Disbursed through 300+ incubators across India.

₹467.75 Cr disbursed to 2,622 startups as of Dec 2024
CGSS

Credit Guarantee Scheme for Startups (CGSS)

Launched by DPIIT. Allows Scheduled Commercial Banks, NBFCs and Venture Debt Funds to extend credit to DPIIT-recognised startups without collateral.

Covers loans up to ₹10 Cr per startup
AIM

Atal Innovation Mission (AIM)

NITI Aayog-led programme. Supports deeptech through Atal Incubation Centres (AICs) and Atal Community Innovation Centres (ACICs). Grants of ₹10 Cr per AIC.

68+ AICs established across India
DPIIT

DPIIT Startup India Recognition

Get recognised as a DPIIT startup and unlock: 3-year income tax exemption (Sec 80-IAC), DPIIT-exclusive funding access, fast-track IP filing, and self-certification on 9 labour laws.

Required for most government fund access

Step-by-Step: How to Actually Raise a Funding Round

The fundraising process in India typically takes 3 to 9 months from first outreach to money-in-bank. Here’s the exact sequence elite founders follow:

1

Get DPIIT Recognition

Register at startupindia.gov.in. This is your access card to government schemes, tax benefits, and many accelerators. It’s free and takes under 2 weeks.

2

Know Your Numbers Cold

Monthly burn rate, runway, CAC, LTV, revenue growth MoM, and gross margin. Investors will ask. Not knowing is an immediate red flag — it signals you don’t run your business on data.

3

Build Your Target Investor List

Research 50–80 investors who have funded companies at your stage, in your sector, at your ticket size. Use Tracxn, Crunchbase, and LinkedIn. Warm intros from portfolio founders convert 5–10x better than cold outreach.

4

Craft a Compelling Pitch Deck (10–14 slides)

Problem → Solution → Market Size → Traction → Business Model → Team → Financials → Use of Funds → Ask. Every slide should provoke curiosity, not answer it. The deck gets you in the room; you close in the room.

5

Run a Tight Process (6–8 weeks)

Send intros in batches. Create FOMO through parallel conversations. Set a soft deadline (“we’re closing the round in 6 weeks”). Investors make decisions faster under time pressure.

6

Nail the First Meeting

Lead with your strongest insight about the market — something the investor hasn’t heard before. Spend the first 5 minutes on the problem, not the solution. Investors back missionaries, not mercenaries.

7

Navigate Due Diligence

Prepare a data room: cap table, financial model, audited accounts (if applicable), customer contracts, employee agreements, IP filings, and references. Clean data room = faster close.

8

Negotiate Term Sheet & Close

Focus on valuation, dilution, board seats, anti-dilution clauses, and liquidation preferences. Hire a startup-savvy lawyer. The cheapest lawyer in a term sheet negotiation costs the most in the long run.

Hottest Sectors Getting Funded in India (2024–25)

Funding by Sector — India 2024 ($ Billion)
Source: Inc42 Annual Funding Report 2024
 

Fintech, enterprise tech, and quick commerce led in 2024, while AI startups raised $643M in 2025 across 100 deals. Defence tech saw its biggest funding surge ever — $311M via 43 deals in H1 2025 alone. Cleantech retained its fourth spot at $829M in 2024.

Startups leveraging AI for operational efficiency are commanding 2–3x higher valuations than non-AI peers in the same sector. If your startup has an AI layer, make sure your pitch communicates it clearly — but be specific about outcomes, not hype.

Key Investors Active in India (2024–25)

Peak XV Partners (Sequoia)

Stage: Seed to Late. Focus: Consumer, SaaS, Fintech, Deeptech. Exits: Zomato, BYJU’s, Freshworks.

Accel India

Stage: Seed to Series B. Focus: SaaS, Consumer, AI. Known for: Flipkart, Swiggy early bets.

Blume Ventures

Stage: Pre-Seed to Series A. India-first domestic fund. Focus: Tech-first startups across sectors.

Lightspeed India

Stage: Early to Growth. Focus: Consumer, SaaS, Deeptech. Portfolio: Oyo, ShareChat, Udaan.

Kalaari Capital

Stage: Early to Series B. Focus: Healthcare, Gaming, Fintech, Emerging Tech.

100X.VC

India’s first fund to invest in 100 startups per year. Stage: Pre-Seed. Cheque: ~₹25L for 1–2%.

Elevation Capital (SAIF)

Stage: Seed to Growth. Focus: Consumer internet, Fintech, B2B. Portfolio: Meesho, Urban Company.

Chiratae Ventures

Stage: Seed to Series B. One of India’s oldest domestic VCs. Focus: Consumer, B2B, Healthtech.

Indian Angel Network

India’s largest angel network. 500+ angel members. Sector-agnostic. Cheques: ₹25L – ₹2Cr.

How to Build a Winning Pitch Deck for Indian Investors


Slide 1 — The Hook: One sentence that makes the investor want to hear the rest. What’s the insight most people are missing about your market?

Slide 2 — Problem: Make the pain visceral. Use data and real customer quotes. Quantify the cost of the problem. Avoid vague “the market is inefficient.”

Slide 3 — Solution: Show the product, not describe it. Screenshots, demo GIFs, or a 60-second video. Investors invest in reality, not imagination.

Slide 4 — Market Size: Show TAM/SAM/SOM with sourced data. For India-specific pitches, cite IBEF, NASSCOM, or government reports. Avoid inflated numbers — VCs know them.

Slide 5 — Traction: Your most important slide. Revenue, users, retention, NPS, MoM growth. Show the graph going up-right. Include cohort data if you have it.

Slide 6 — Business Model: How do you make money? Margins? Why is this defensible? How do unit economics improve at scale?

Slide 7 — Competition: Show the landscape honestly. Claim your unique position. Never say “we have no competitors” — it tells investors either the market doesn’t exist or you haven’t done research.

Slide 8 — Team: Why are YOU the best people to build this? Relevant expertise, domain knowledge, prior startup experience, extraordinary obsession with the problem.

Slide 9 — Financials: 3-year projection with assumptions shown. Show your path to profitability. Include current burn and runway.

Slide 10 — The Ask: How much? What will it fund? What milestones will this capital let you hit? Be specific — “18 months runway to ₹5Cr ARR” beats “grow the business.”

Common Fundraising Mistakes Indian Founders Make

✓ Do This

  • Focus on building traction before approaching VCs
  • Use warm introductions from mutual connections
  • Run a tight, time-bounded process with multiple investors in parallel
  • Be honest about risks and challenges
  • Know exactly what milestones your round will fund
  • Get DPIIT recognition before fundraising
  • Hire an experienced startup lawyer for term sheets

✗ Avoid This

  • Approaching VCs before you have an MVP or traction
  • Cold emailing generic intros with no research on the investor
  • Raising a round with only one investor in conversation
  • Over-inflating your TAM or using vanity metrics
  • Signing a term sheet without understanding anti-dilution provisions
  • Giving up too much equity in early rounds (more than 20–25%)
  • Fundraising during a growth slump

Frequently Asked Questions

How much equity should I give in a seed round in India?

The typical range is 10–25% for a seed round. Be very protective of early dilution — each round will further dilute your stake, and you want to own at least 15–20% at the time of IPO to remain meaningfully incentivised.

Do I need a CA/company registration before approaching investors?

Yes. You should ideally be a Private Limited Company (Pvt. Ltd.) registered under the Companies Act 2013 before approaching institutional investors. Sole proprietorships and partnerships are not acceptable structures for equity investment. Also ensure your DPIIT registration is active.

What is the typical timeline from first meeting to receiving funds?

For angel rounds: 4–8 weeks. For seed rounds: 6–12 weeks. For Series A and above: 3–6 months. Due diligence (financial, legal, technical) is the biggest variable. Clean documentation speeds this up dramatically.

Can a startup in a Tier-2 or Tier-3 city raise VC funding?

Yes, and increasingly so. Over 51% of DPIIT-recognised startups are from Tier II/III cities. Investors like Blume Ventures and 100X.VC actively target these geographies. The shift toward video-first investor relations has also removed the geographic disadvantage significantly.

What is venture debt and when should I use it?

Venture debt is a loan (not equity) typically available to startups that have raised at least one VC round. It lets you extend runway without diluting ownership. Key providers: Trifecta Capital, InnoVen Capital, Stride Ventures. Use it to bridge between rounds or fund specific asset purchases.



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