DAAKit secures $138K seed funding from Inflection Point Ventures to expand its dark store operations for D2C delivery.

Why Inflection Point Ventures Just Backed This Dark Store Startup to Fix D2C Logistics

Harshvardhan Jain
10 Min Read

Quick Take 

  •  Funding: $138K (Rs 1.16 Cr) pre-seed round
  •  Lead Investor: Inflection Point Ventures — India’s largest angel network with 12,000+ investors and 200+ portfolio startups
  •  Traction: 15-20% MoM growth in orders and revenue; profitable unit economics since launch
  •  Use of Funds: 25 new dark stores; tech upgrades; sales and ops hiring
  •  What’s Next: Tier II city expansion starting Lucknow; targeting a larger seed round by late 2026

Hyperlocal fulfillment startup DAAKit has raised $138K (Rs 1.16 Cr) in a pre-seed round led by Inflection Point Ventures, India’s largest angel network, to build a distributed dark store delivery network for D2C brands across India’s Tier I and II cities.

This positions DAAKit to become the fulfillment backbone for D2C brands that cannot compete with Amazon or Blinkit on delivery speed. With fresh capital and 25 new dark stores planned, the startup can now serve brands in markets where centralized warehousing alone cannot guarantee same-day delivery — something larger logistics aggregators like Shiprocket and Delhivery will need to watch closely.

 StartupFeed Insight

What the numbers say: DAAKit achieved 15-20% MoM compounding revenue growth while staying profitable — at the pre-seed stage, that unit economics discipline is rarer than the growth rate itself.

What this means for you:

  • If you’re a founder: Asset-light models with strong unit economics can attract angel capital even below $200K — product-market fit evidence matters more than scale at pre-seed.
  • If you’re an investor: D2C fulfillment infrastructure is underfunded relative to the $250 Bn logistics TAM — DAAKit’s profitability at year one suggests early entry windows remain open.
  • If you’re a D2C brand: Third-party dark store networks like DAAKit could cut your logistics costs by 20-30% vs. centralised shipping while enabling same-day delivery in Tier II cities.

Our prediction: DAAKit will close a seed round of Rs 3-5 Cr by Q1 2027, fueled by traction in Tier II cities. If it captures even 0.5% of the D2C fulfillment market by FY28, it reaches a scale that positions it for a Series A. The dark store model for branded D2C — not grocery — is still wide open in India.

Deal breakdown

The pre-seed round was led by Inflection Point Ventures (IPV), with the full amount going toward DAAKit as a primary infusion — new shares issued to the company. No secondary component has been disclosed. IPV, founded in 2018 and headquartered in Gurugram, has backed 200+ startups across India and counts 12,000+ angel investors across CXOs, HNIs, and family offices.

Investor Role Type Status
Inflection Point Ventures Lead Angel Network / Early-stage VC New
AIC IIT Delhi Sonipat Prior Grant Incubator / Govt. Scheme Existing (Rs 20 Lakh, Startup India Seed Fund)

Valuation context

Valuation at the pre-seed stage has not been publicly disclosed. The $138K raise — modest by sector standards — reflects IPV’s typical ticket size for asset-light, early-stage businesses with demonstrated unit economics. DAAKit’s total external funding to date stands at approximately Rs 1.36 Cr, inclusive of the Rs 20 Lakh Startup India Seed Fund grant.

Metric Pre-seed (April 2026) Note
Round Size $138K (Rs 1.16 Cr) Primary infusion only
Total Funding to Date ~Rs 1.36 Cr Incl. Rs 20 Lakh SISFS grant
Valuation Not disclosed Typical pre-seed; likely sub-Rs 5 Cr post-money
Revenue Run Rate (FY25 est.) ~Rs 1.15 Cr ARR (FY24) Per YourStory, May 2025
Monthly Growth 15-20% MoM Orders and revenue

What the founder says

Why should Amazon or Flipkart have all the fun? D2C brands pay hefty commissions, lose out on customer data, and can’t build brand loyalty. They need to offer the same delivery speed from their own websites.”

— Chandan Singh Ghugtyal, Founder, DAAKit

The quote is telling: Ghugtyal isn’t positioning DAAKit as another shipping aggregator. He’s pitching it as a brand sovereignty tool — a way for D2C founders to own their customer data, build loyalty, and compete on speed without surrendering margin to Amazon or Blinkit. That framing resonates with the current D2C moment in India, where post-pandemic brand fatigue on marketplaces is driving founders back to direct channels.

Use of funds

The capital will be deployed across three priorities:

  • Dark store expansion: Opening 25 new dark stores in Tier I cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Kolkata) and Tier II cities starting with Lucknow, where DAAKit is already in test mode.
  • Technology upgrades: Deepening its proprietary WMS and courier allocation engine; building AI/ML demand forecasting to help brands pre-position inventory at the hyperlocal level.
  • Leadership hiring: Adding senior leaders in sales, business development, and operations to accelerate brand onboarding and city-level execution.

The emphasis on dark store count over central warehousing signals DAAKit is prioritizing hyperlocal proximity — the core unit of its competitive advantage — rather than near-term cost reduction or debt repayment.

Financial performance

DAAKit’s financials are early-stage but directionally strong. In its first full year of operations, the company recorded Rs 1.15 Cr in revenue with a net monthly income of Rs 13-15 Lakh — a strong profitability signal for a pre-seed logistics startup. By contrast, most Indian logistics startups operate at sustained losses at this stage.

Metric FY24 (Year 1) Direction
Revenue Rs 1.15 Cr ↑ Growing
Net Monthly Income Rs 13-15 Lakh Profitable
MoM Growth (Orders/Revenue) 15-20% ↑ Compounding
Cities 5 (Delhi, Gurugram, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Kolkata) ↑ Expanding
Customers Brands incl. Gocattles, Furver Kare, Asaya, Hummel, Too Yum, Dr Vaidya’s Growing

At 15-20% MoM compounding from a Rs 1.15 Cr base, DAAKit’s annualised revenue run-rate heading into FY26 could be materially higher — though exact FY25 numbers are not yet publicly filed with MCA.

Who should be watching?

Player Why This Matters
Shiprocket / Pickrr DAAKit’s distributed dark store model threatens Shiprocket’s aggregation-only play — brands that choose DAAKit get faster delivery AND lower cost, without needing Shiprocket’s courier aggregation layer.
WareIQ The closest direct competitor in D2C fulfillment tech. WareIQ is VC-backed (Y Combinator) and further along; DAAKit’s profitability edge and Tier II ambition could differentiate it in underserved markets.
Zippee Also a B2B dark store/hyperlocal delivery platform for D2C brands. DAAKit’s proprietary WMS and courier engine vs. Zippee’s network depth will be the key battleground.
Shadowfax Covers hyperlocal and Q-commerce delivery for enterprise brands. DAAKit’s focus on smaller D2C brands and AI-led inventory placement is a different wedge — but Shadowfax could move down-market.

Funding journey

Round Date Amount Lead Investor / Source
Startup India Seed Fund (Grant) 2024 Rs 20 Lakh AIC IIT Delhi Sonipat (Government)
Pre-seed April 2026 $138K (Rs 1.16 Cr) Inflection Point Ventures
Total ~Rs 1.36 Cr

What’s next

DAAKit will deploy its 25 new dark stores over the next 12-18 months, with Lucknow serving as the Tier II proof-of-concept. If city-level unit economics hold — and the early data suggests they will — the startup will be well-placed to raise a larger seed round by Q1 2027, targeting institutional VC interest.

The real test is not the dark store rollout. It is whether DAAKit can convert brand clients fast enough to fill those stores to the density needed for same-day delivery economics. At 15-20% MoM growth, the trajectory is promising — but city-level density takes time.

India’s quick commerce market is projected to reach $40 Bn by 2030. The battle for D2C brand loyalty within that market hasn’t been won. DAAKit is placing its bet that the infrastructure layer — not the consumer app — is where the durable value sits.

What do you think — can a bootstrapped dark store platform compete with VC-funded logistics giants in India’s Tier II cities? Let us know on X @StartupFeed_official

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