
Indian AI coding startup Emergent becomes a unicorn with $130M Series C
Quick Answer
Emergent, an Indian AI coding startup, has achieved unicorn status with a $130 million Series C funding, raising its valuation to $1.5 billion.
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Emergent, an Indian AI coding startup, has achieved unicorn status with a $130 million Series C funding, raising its valuation to $1.5 billion. The company targets small to medium-sized businesses, offering a production-grade application for non-technical users, and has seen a 70% revenue increase to $120 million annually with over 200,000 paying customers.
Key Points
- Emergent raised $130 million in Series C, totaling $230 million in funding.
- The startup's valuation surged five-fold in six months to $1.5 billion.
- It targets entrepreneurs and SMEs, differentiating from developer-focused tools.
- Emergent's annual revenue run-rate reached $120 million, up 70% in four months.
- Plans to expand operations in Europe and grow its San Francisco team by 30-40 employees.
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~3 min readIndian AI coding startup Emergent has raised $130 million in a Series C funding round at a $1.5 billion post-money valuation, a five-fold jump in six months.
The funding round was led by private equity firm Creaegis. New investors MNI Ventures-Claypond, Sentinel Global, and existing backers Khosla Ventures, SoftBank’s Vision Fund 2, Lightspeed, and Y Combinator also participated. The deal takes Emergent’s total funding to $230 million. The startup had previously raised a $70 million Series B at a $300 million valuation in January.
AI coding has attracted hordes of investors, with startups such as Lovable, Replit, and Cursor raising billions in funding to develop tools that allow developers to speed up their work. AI labs such as OpenAI and Anthropic have also pushed deeper into coding.
Emergent is looking to gain a share of this crowded market by targeting entrepreneurs looking to start new businesses and small and medium-sized companies that have traditionally relied on email, spreadsheets, and messaging apps to run their operations.
“Our thesis has always been to build a production-grade application for serious builders,” Emergent co-founder and chief executive Mukund Jha (pictured above, right) told TechCrunch in an interview. “So you’re basically getting an engineering team in a box.”
Jha said the startup has reached an annual run-rate revenue of $120 million, up 70% in the last four months, and has more than 200,000 paying customers. Jha started Emergent with his brother Madhav Jha (CTO) in June last year.
Customers include trucking companies building software to track shipments; factories; construction businesses creating enterprise resource planning systems; and property managers developing internal customer management tools.
North American customers account for about a third of Emergent’s revenue, Europe makes up another third, and the rest comes from other markets, Jha told TechCrunch. India accounts for about 8% to 9%.
Emergent’s focus on small businesses and entrepreneurs pits it directly against Replit, which Jha described as the startup’s closest rival. He sought to distinguish Emergent from developer-focused coding tools such as Anthropic’s Claude Code, OpenAI’s Codex, and Cursor, arguing that non-technical users need a platform that handles deployment, hosting, testing, and debugging alongside the work of programming.
However, Jha acknowledged that design remains a weakness, pointing out that many websites built using AI tools tend to look similar.
Emergent plans to use the fresh capital to accelerate product development and research, including improving the success rate of applications built on its platform and its core AI agent workflows. The company is working to support more complex AI applications, including those that use local and open source models, Jha said, adding that it will also invest in expanding its go-to-market operations.
The company is also considering opening an office in Europe, where Jha said Emergent is seeing significant customer traction.
Emergent has about 200 employees, most of whom work in Bengaluru, with a handful in San Francisco. The startup plans to expand its San Francisco office by 30 to 40 people by the end of the year, Jha said.
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Jagmeet covers startups, tech policy-related updates, and all other major tech-centric developments from India for TechCrunch. He previously worked as a principal correspondent at NDTV.
You can contact or verify outreach from Jagmeet by emailing mail@journalistjagmeet.com.
— Originally published at techcrunch.com
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