Not even the quarterly trends are encouraging. Compared to the same period in 2024, the total amount of funds raised during the third quarter of 2025—that is, the months of July, August, and September—was $2.8 billion, a 32% decrease. This was also a 12.5% decrease from the second quarter of 2025 on a sequential basis.
Overall, this does not bode well for the Indian startup scene because capital flow has been impeded by the unstable macroeconomic climate. Additionally, a major portion of funding is currently going to AI firms, particularly in the US. But in India, where there aren’t many AI firms, this tendency hasn’t held true.
The late stage category raised the most money in the third quarter of 2025, followed by the early stage and growth categories. The slow infusion of funds into the growth and late-stage segments has been the largest obstacle facing the Indian startup ecosystem.