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Semiconductor Startups Attract Rising Investor Interest in India!

Semiconductor Startups Attract Rising Investor Interest in India!

India’s semiconductor ecosystem is gaining strong momentum as private capital increasingly flows into chip-design startups, manufacturing-support ventures, and semiconductor service firms. In the first five months of 2026 alone, Indian semiconductor startups raised $92 million across 12 deals—nearly four times the funds raised in all of 2025 . This surge signals growing confidence in India’s ability to become a serious player in the global chip economy.

📊 The Numbers: A Funding Surge

PeriodAmount RaisedNumber of Deals
2023$5 million
2024$25 million6
2025$50 million
Jan-May 2026$92 million12

Sources: Venture Intelligence, Endiya Partners report 

Early-stage funding has been particularly strong, with $34 million in seed rounds** across eight deals, with the remainder comprising Series A funding . Semiconductor startups raised about **$50 million in 2025, up from $28 million in 2024 and $5 million in 2023, reflecting a 10x growth over two years .

🚀 Key 2026 Funding Deals

StartupFocusFunding
Calligo TechnologiesRISC-V processors for AI & supercomputingIn talks for $12-15M (target valuation $50-55M) 
BigEndian SemiconductorsSecure Vision AI SoCs for surveillance$6M 
C2i SemiconductorsPower management chips for AI data centres$10M+ 
HrdWyrFabless semiconductors$13M 
VerveSemiML-enabled analogue ICs$10M+ 
Constelli$10M+ 

Several other DLI beneficiaries—including Mindgrove Technologies, InCore, and MOSart Semi—are also actively raising funds from private venture capital firms .

🏗️ Government’s Role: De-risking Deep-Tech Innovation

Industry leaders credit the government for playing a key part in triggering increased activity in the sector . The Design-Linked Incentive (DLI) scheme has been instrumental in de-risking early-stage investments by absorbing initial risks, helping crowd in private and venture capital funds .

Key government initiatives driving semiconductor momentum:

Policy/ProgramAllocationImpact
India Semiconductor Mission 2.0₹1,000 crore (FY26-27)Focus on equipment, materials, and full-stack Indian IP 
Design-Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme24 startups supported; ₹430 crore in VC funding attracted 
Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS)₹40,000 croreInvestment commitments doubled 
Deep Tech Fund of Funds₹20,000 crore for private R&DTargets semiconductors, AI, space tech, biotech 

The government has so far approved proposals from about two dozen companies under the DLI scheme . Key achievements under DLI include:

  • 24 semiconductor design startups currently supported across the country
  • ₹430 crore in venture capital funding attracted by DLI-backed startups
  • 16 tape-outs completed by startups, with six chips fabricated at advanced foundry nodes including 12nm 
  • Approximately 2.25 crore EDA tool hours recorded under the national chip design platform 

🔧 From Design to Production: Commercial Milestones

With an ecosystem developing, at least half a dozen semiconductor companies have taped out and sent chips to foundries for manufacturing .

Startups reaching commercial production:

StartupMilestoneTarget
Mindgrove TechnologiesTape-out completedProduction later in 2026 
Agnit SemiconductorsPilots running; GaN chips for defenceVolume production later in 2026 
BigEndianFirst commercial chip tape-outCommercialisation underway 
Calligo TechnologiesPosit-based silicon chipScaling commercially with fresh funds 

C2i Semiconductors, Mindgrove, Vervesemi, and Calligo have all tapped into global foundries in Taiwan and South Korea for tape-outs . The Indian semiconductor market—valued at $52 billion in 2024—is expected to **double to $103 billion by 2030** .

💡 What Investors Are Saying

Naganand Doraswamy, Managing Partner at Ideaspring Capital“In addition to the push from the government, there is a huge opportunity for India to have its own chips in whitegoods, which is a key focus area for the company.” 

Ram Anant, Co-founder and CEO, C2i Semiconductors“There is growing interest from Indian investors to back startups. There is also a big push from the government through the DLI scheme, which helps crowd in private and VC funds by absorbing early-stage risks.” 

Sateesh Andra, Managing Partner at Endiya Partners: *”This is a fast-paced growth sector. Broadly, there are three to four types of companies emerging in India—across IP, fabless products, services, and AI-driven EDA automation. We see a 4x-5x growth opportunity in venture investments over the next two years.”* 

Srini Chinamilli, CEO, Tessolve“More startups are being funded, not necessarily with hundreds of millions, but at least in the tens of millions. Investors are beginning to realise that semiconductor paybacks can be very strong.” 

🌍 The Opportunity and the Gaps

While the ecosystem is developing, critical gaps remain:

ChallengeCurrent Status
Equipment & MaterialsOver 90% imported 
Analog & Mixed-signal IPIndigenous capabilities remain limited 
Local Testing InfrastructureNeed for more local semiconductor testing companies 
Production CostsHigh-end chip manufacturing remains expensive 
Scale-up Track RecordYet to see Indian semicon companies scale to Series B and beyond 
Startup Recognition PeriodCurrently 10 years; deep-tech needs 15+ years 

India’s semiconductor workforce is also expanding. The Chips to Startup programme now enables EDA tool access across 397 universities, with 67,000 students and over 1,000 startup engineers using these tools for chip design . Specialised academic programmes in VLSI design, IC manufacturing, and electronics engineering have been introduced to build a skilled talent pipeline .

🔮 The Road Ahead

The semiconductor investment landscape in India is evolving across multiple segments:

SegmentInvestment Thesis
Fabless StartupsBuilding IP-led products; well-suited for venture capital 
EDA & AI-driven AutomationLower upfront capital, shorter cycles, recurring revenue models 
Supply Chain LocalisationOpportunities around fabs and OSAT ecosystem 
Packaging & AssemblyLess capital-intensive; high scale potential 

Tessolve CEO Srini Chinamilli has suggested that India could benefit from a dedicated $5 billion to $10 billion fund focusing on semiconductor aspects beyond manufacturing, with government-backed public-private partnerships sharing investment risk .

The window to act is narrowing, but India is positioning itself as a trusted and reliable partner in the global semiconductor value chain . With government incentives, rising domestic demand, and growing investor confidence, India is on track to achieve the capability to design and manufacture chips required for 70-75% of domestic applications by 2029 

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