Indian startup funding fell to $630 million in May 2026, a 27% drop from $865 million in April and a 45% decline from the same month a year ago. That makes May 2026 the weakest month for Indian startup funding in six years, and the lowest monthly total since July 2025. The month's headline number depended heavily on a single deal: Rapido's $240 million Series F round, which alone accounted for nearly 38% of all capital raised.
Strip out Rapido, and the picture looks considerably thinner. No other startup closed a deal above $100 million in May. The remaining growth and late-stage activity included fintech startup Scapia at $63 million, Hyderabad-based Skyroot Aerospace at $60 million, edtech platform upGrad at $38 million, and home services startup Pronto at $20 million. Skyroot's raise was notable for a different reason: it made the company India's first aerospace unicorn, a milestone for a sector that has attracted growing policy attention in recent years.
In total, Indian startups completed 12 growth and late-stage deals worth $492 million and 51 early-stage deals worth $137 million, plus 10 transactions where deal sizes were not disclosed, according to data compiled by Entrackr.
Where money went and what it signals
Bengaluru captured the largest share of capital by a wide margin, drawing $411 million across 35 deals, or about 65% of the national total. Mumbai came second at $71 million, followed by Hyderabad at $60 million, mostly from the Skyroot round. Delhi-NCR, despite recording 15 deals, raised just $45 million, reflecting a continued tilt toward southern hubs.
At the sector level, fintech led with $97 million across 10 deals. E-commerce followed with $43 million from 13 deals, and AI attracted $26 million across 11 transactions. Semiconductor startups emerged as a quiet theme in the early-stage segment, with HrdWyr raising $13 million and BigEndian Semiconductor closing $6 million. Human Archive, an AI venture, brought in $8.2 million, and robotics firm ANSCER Robotics raised $5.4 million. These smaller rounds point to investor interest in deep-tech hardware at the pre-scale stage, where ticket sizes are naturally smaller but strategic bets are being placed early.
Acquisition activity stayed brisk even as primary funding slowed. InMobi acquired MobileAction to expand its AI and mobile growth tools. Netradyne bought Moove for its AI capabilities. In fintech, Freo acquired IndiaLends and Oxyzo moved to acquire GoldenPi. Healthtech saw Innovaccer acquire CaduceusHealth and Vaidam Health acquire CancerRounds. Emami picked up a 60% stake in InCut Digital, and Wingreens acquired Safe Harvest. The breadth of deal types suggests that consolidation is quietly running alongside the pullback in venture rounds.
Pressure on people and the broader operating environment
Layoffs accelerated sharply in May. Four startups, Innovaccer, Adda247, Pocket FM, and Apna Mart, collectively cut around 680 jobs. That compares with roughly 120 layoffs across two companies in April. The jump signals that cost management is again a priority for startups facing slower fundraising and investor demands for leaner unit economics.
Leadership churn added to the unsettled picture. Twelve senior departures were recorded in May, including exits from Share.Market, Fashinza, Fi Money, Unacademy, and Pocket FM. Startups also announced 32 new leadership appointments during the same period, suggesting active restructuring rather than simple contraction.
On the regulatory front, the Supreme Court upheld the government's retrospective 28% GST levy on online gaming, ruling that once money is staked, the distinction between games of skill and games of chance does not affect the tax treatment. The ruling validates tax demands exceeding Rs 1 lakh crore and is a major setback for gaming companies that had argued they should be taxed only on platform fees. It sharpens the compliance burden across the online gaming sector and could affect both valuations and investor appetite for new bets in that space.
IPO momentum remained limited. Kissht debuted on the stock exchanges during the month, while quick commerce firm Zepto received approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India for its proposed public issue. No new ESOP buybacks were recorded in May, continuing a dry spell that began in April. According to Entrackr data, seven startups collectively bought back nearly $220 million in employee stock options in the first quarter of 2026, making the subsequent two-month pause notable.
What to watch next: whether June brings a recovery in deal volumes or confirms a sustained slowdown; the pace of Zepto's IPO preparation after receiving SEBI approval; the gaming sector's response to the Supreme Court GST ruling; and whether layoff activity continues at May's elevated rate as startups navigate tighter funding conditions.