| Quick Take: | ||
| Company: | DeHaat (Agrevolution Pvt. Ltd.) | |
| Founder: | Shashank Kumar — IIT Delhi grad, farmer’s son from Chhapra, Bihar | |
| Revenue: | Rs 3,040 Cr (FY25) | Total Funding: $222 Mn+ across 11 rounds | |
| Scale: | 13 Mn+ farmers | 11 states | 1.2 Lakh villages | 18,000+ micro-entrepreneurs | |
| Mission: | “Beej se Bazaar tak” — Seeds to Market. Eliminate middlemen for India’s 600M farmers | |
| Recognition: | Forbes 30 Under 30 | PM Champions of Change | Ashoka Fellow | |
Agritech platform DeHaat has crossed Rs 3,040 Cr (approx. $365 Mn) in annual revenue in FY25, making it India’s largest full-stack agritech company by revenue — built by Shashank Kumar, a Bihar farmer’s son who gave up a corporate career at Unilever and PepsiCo to spend years in dusty Bihar villages, earning the trust of farmers one season at a time.
In a sector where giants like Reliance and Adani have not succeeded in meaningful last-mile farmer reach, a five-founder team from Bihar and IIT Delhi has built a platform connecting 13 million farmers across 11 states to seeds, credit, expert crop advisory, and direct market access — eliminating the middlemen who had extracted value from Indian agriculture for generations.
StartupFeed Insight
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The Man Behind DeHaat
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Shashank Kumar |
| Role | Co-founder & CEO, DeHaat (Agrevolution Pvt. Ltd.) |
| Hometown | Chhapra village, Bihar — farming family background |
| Education | B.Tech, IIT Delhi (Graduated 2008) |
| Corporate Career | Unilever, PepsiCo (before founding DeHaat) |
| Co-Founders | Shyam Sundar Singh, Amrendra Singh, Adarsh Srivastava, Abhishek Dokania |
| Awards | Forbes 30 Under 30 (2014) | PM Champions of Change (2018) | Ashoka Fellow | IIT Delhi Distinguished Alumni (2017) |
| Industry Position | One of India’s most recognised agritech founders; frequently cited in NITI Aayog agri innovation reports |
Shashank Kumar grew up watching his family lose a disproportionate share of their harvest profits to brokers and middlemen — a structural injustice embedded in Indian agriculture. After graduating from IIT Delhi in 2008, he spent three years at Unilever and PepsiCo, gaining supply chain and consumer insights that would later become the backbone of DeHaat’s model. But the pull of Chhapra’s fields never left.
In 2012, Kumar co-founded Agrevolution Pvt. Ltd. — operating under the brand DeHaat (“from village”) — with four colleagues who shared a conviction that technology could fix Indian agriculture’s broken supply chain. The company’s tagline: “Beej se Bazaar tak” (Seeds to Market).
The Early Years: Trust Before Technology
The first years were gruelling. Farmers in Bihar and UP were sceptical of another urban-origin promise. Kumar responded the only way that works in rural India: he showed up, repeatedly.
DeHaat’s early model was hyper-local — deploying trained micro-entrepreneurs (“DeHaat Center” operators) in villages who became trusted advisors, input distributors, and produce aggregators. By 2019, the platform had reached 65,000 farmers across Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Odisha. No celebrity investors. No press launches. Just compounding farmer trust.
The breakthrough came when DeHaat introduced AI-powered crop advisory — personalised recommendations on pest management, irrigation timing, and yield optimisation sent directly to farmers’ phones. For many users, it was their first experience of precision agriculture at no additional cost.
Financial Performance: Revenue Growth, Profitability Ahead
| Metric | FY23 (Est.) | FY24 | FY25 | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | Rs 2,000 Cr | Rs 2,720 Cr | Rs 3,040 Cr | ↑ Consistent |
| Net Loss | Rs ~800 Cr | Rs 1,113 Cr | Rs 369 Cr* | ↓ Narrowing |
| Operational Loss | — | Rs 245 Cr | Rs 207 Cr | ↓ Improving |
| Revenue Growth | — | +36% YoY | +12% YoY | Moderating |
FY25 reported net profit of Rs 369 Cr includes non-cash gains. Operational loss stands at Rs 207 Cr — improving from Rs 245 Cr in FY24. DeHaat claims EBITDA breakeven in Q1 FY26, with full operational profitability targeted by FY26 end.
At Rs 3,040 Cr revenue and a 12% YoY growth rate, DeHaat’s topline expansion is moderating — a sign of intentional focus on margin improvement rather than pure volume scaling. With venture debt of Rs 200 Cr from Trifecta Capital raised in April 2025 for geographic expansion, DeHaat is adding new states while tightening cost structures in existing ones.
Funding Journey: $222 Mn from 31 Investors
| Round | Year | Amount | Lead Investors | Valuation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seed | 2014 | $1.5 Mn | Omnivore, AgFunder | $~5 Mn |
| Series A | 2018 | $12 Mn | Omnivore, FMO, RTP Global | $40 Mn |
| Series B | 2019 | $21 Mn | Prosus (Naspers), Sequoia India | $100 Mn |
| Series C | 2020 | $30 Mn | Sofina, RTP Global | $150 Mn |
| Series D | 2021 | $115 Mn | Sofina, Lightrock India, Temasek, Prosus | $500-550 Mn |
| Series E | 2022 | $60 Mn | Sofina Ventures, Temasek (co-leads) | $700-800 Mn |
| Venture Debt | 2025 | Rs 200 Cr | Trifecta Capital | Undisclosed |
| Total | — | $222 Mn+ | 31+ investors | ~$700-800 Mn |
DeHaat’s investor roster reads like a who’s-who of impact-focused global capital: Sofina (Belgium), Temasek (Singapore), Lightrock India, Peak XV Partners (Sequoia India), Prosus Ventures, and RTP Global. The company has completed 7 acquisitions in 6 years, including FarmGuide (B2B SaaS, 2019), Veezamart (farm management, 2019), and NEERX (2025)—consolidating India’s fragmented agritech market piece by piece.
Competitive Landscape
| Company | Valuation | Revenue | Model | Geography |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DeHaat | $700-800 Mn | Rs 3,040 Cr | Full-stack | Seeds + Advisory + Market | 11 states, North/East India |
| Ninjacart | $812 Mn | Rs ~2,000 Cr | B2B fresh produce supply chain | 12+ cities |
| AgroStar | $235 Mn | Rs ~350 Cr | Input marketplace + advisory app | 6 states |
| WayCool | ~$375 Mn | Rs ~1,000 Cr | Fresh produce supply chain | South India focus |
| Gramophone | $50 Mn | Rs ~200 Cr | Agri-input marketplace | MP, Rajasthan |
DeHaat’s full-stack model — operating simultaneously on input distribution, crop advisory, and output aggregation — creates a defensibility that pure-play input marketplaces like AgroStar cannot easily replicate. WayCool, once considered DeHaat’s most dangerous competitor in fresh produce, is now in deep operational trouble. DeHaat’s North and East India concentration also means Southern India remains entirely greenfield for its next expansion phase.
What’s Next for DeHaat
The company has publicly committed to full operational profitability in FY26 — a milestone that would position it as India’s only profitable agritech platform at scale and the most credible pre-IPO candidate in the sector.
Kumar has flagged Southern India as the next geographic frontier, with presence in Maharashtra and states below the Vindhyas expected to begin after current network deepening. DeHaat’s stated ambition: reach 50 million Indian farmers — roughly the size of Germany’s entire population.
The real story isn’t just the numbers. It’s that a farmer’s son from Chhapra built the infrastructure that India’s government ministries, FMCG giants, and agri-input companies couldn’t.
The question for 2026-27: Will DeHaat get to an IPO before India’s agritech funding drought — agritech funding fell from $360 Mn in 2024 to ~$160 Mn in 2025 — forces a consolidation it may not want?
What do you think — will DeHaat become India’s first agritech unicorn by IPO? Share your view at @StartupFeed_official
