India has in the past decade seen a proliferation of entrepreneurship. 2025 has been no exception although the year has seen its ups and downs both in terms of deal values as well as deal volumes. The year gone by has seen several interesting developments in the early-stage investment space. Data available online indicates that in the first nine months of 2025, early-stage funding declined fairly significantly from a comparable period in 2024.

Newer sectors such as AI, AI-led initiatives and Deeptech have seen increased activity while technology-enabled sectors such as fintech, ecommerce and software as a service (SaaS) remained in focus with both new and follow-on funding rounds. While geographies that historically attracted funding (Bengaluru and NCR) continued to do so, there was an increased interest in funding in tier 2 cities including several seminars, and startup events being organised in such cities. Various governments have also sought to attract investment to cities other than state capitals.
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2025 has also seen an increase in the pool of capital available to early-stage companies. While historically there were either angel investors or early-stage funds, the year has seen heightened interest from family offices and from corporate venture capital (venture capital divisions of corporates). This allows a far greater degree of flexibility to early-stage companies to attract more patient capital without traditional fund pressures. Schemes of various governments have also proved to be a good source of seed capital for very early-stage companies.
On the legal and regulatory front, there have been several interesting developments, a few of which are:
Given the rapid growth in technology, there is often a blurring of regulations. Defence tech is an area of interest for entrepreneurs and investors alike but the technology aspect of the sector is often subject to regulations around defence including FDI restrictions which may have the unintended effect of stifling innovation due to regulatory bottlenecks in fundraising. Further clarity on regulation of technology-enabled sectors, which assist other sectors would be welcome. AI and Deeptech are likely to see continued interest as well as follow-on and later stage rounds in companies that have raised their first institutional investment in 2025.
Ideally, one would like to see simplification of the early-stage investment ecosystem with a view to reach the US-style NVCA model to enable transaction speed. There can be some incremental steps that can be taken including further easing up of the SAFE notes/convertible notes route of investment and allowing for a registered startup to having other business verticals in the form of subsidiaries and joint ventures.
At the end of 2026, one will hopefully look back as a year where innovation has been incentivised, funding has been eased and transactions are faster to execute.
This article was originally published in India Business Law Journal on 16 April 2026 Written by: Manav Nagaraj, Partner. Click here for original article
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