Quick Take
- DailyObjects revenue doubled in FY26, taking annual run-rate to Rs 320 Cr ($33.6 Mn).
- The Gurugram brand serves 2 Mn plus customers with in-house, design-led tech accessories.
- Founders Pankaj Garg and Saurav Adlakha target Rs 400 Cr run-rate by FY27.
In This Article
DailyObjects revenue doubled in FY26, lifting the design-led tech accessories brand to an annual recurring revenue (ARR) run-rate of Rs 320 Cr ($33.6 Mn), the company said in February 2026.
Founded in 2012 by Pankaj Garg and Saurav Adlakha, the Gurugram company sells phone cases, bags, wallets and wireless chargers from its design-led tech accessories catalogue, almost all built in-house. Net revenue reached about Rs 110 Cr ($11.5 Mn) in FY25, per Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) filings, with roughly 70% of sales coming from its own website.
StartupFeed Insight
The number that matters is not the Rs 320 Cr run-rate, it is where it comes from: about 40% to 45% of DailyObjects demand now sits in Tier 3 and Tier 4 cities, per the company. Premium accessory buying has clearly moved beyond metros, a shift that rivals boAt and Noise will track closely. StartupFeed expects DailyObjects revenue to cross the Rs 400 Cr ($42 Mn) ARR mark by the end of FY27, powered by its Stack ecosystem and roughly 400 Apple reseller counters. With its Exclusive Brand Outlets (EBOs) earning from month one, a fresh funding round looks likely in 2027. By Soumya.
DailyObjects revenue and growth at a glance
DailyObjects is a Gurugram-based direct-to-consumer (D2C) brand that designs and sells lifestyle tech accessories, from phone cases to wireless power banks.
| Metric | Detail | Notes |
| Founded | 2012, Gurugram | Founders Pankaj Garg and Saurav Adlakha |
| Category | Lifestyle tech accessories | Cases, bags, adapters, wireless chargers |
| FY25 net revenue | Rs 110 Cr ($11.5 Mn) | Per MCA filings |
| ARR (Feb 2026) | Rs 320 Cr ($33.6 Mn) | Company announcement |
| Total funding raised | About $14.5 Mn | 360 ONE, Unilazer, Seedfund |
| Customers | 2 Mn plus | Around 70% sales from own website |
The standout detail is momentum: DailyObjects sales have grown roughly +100% year on year (YoY), and the company projects about Rs 230 Cr ($24.1 Mn) in FY26 revenue.
About DailyObjects
DailyObjects is a design-led lifestyle tech accessories brand founded in 2012 by Pankaj Garg (CEO) and Saurav Adlakha (COO), and based in Gurugram, Haryana. It sells phone cases, bags, wallets, adapters and wireless chargers, with products made by over 1,000 Indian artisans. It serves more than 2 Mn customers and is backed by 360 ONE, Unilazer Ventures and Seedfund.
What makes DailyObjects products stand out?
DailyObjects builds most of its range in-house, running roughly 50 core products through an 8 to 10 month design cycle, per the company. Its wireless line leads the story: LOOP is India’s first Qi2-certified MagSafe-compatible power bank, cleared by the Wireless Power Consortium (WPC) for 15W charging. POP adds India’s first foldable-pin adapters on GaN5 technology, while the Stack modular ecosystem, launched in October 2025, has grown about 3x. DailyObjects also sits among the two to three firms worldwide offering Qi 2.2 chargers, and its power banks sell at 2.5x to 3x mass-market prices while volumes stay strong.
Why is DailyObjects revenue growing so fast?
DailyObjects sells premium, design-first products and keeps most sales on its own website, which is the core reason its topline keeps climbing.
“Design has always been the core of what we do at DailyObjects,” said Pankaj Garg, Co-founder and CEO.
That focus shows up in the mix. Growth has come from wireless products and a wider retail network, not deep discounts. Nearly a third of sales now land in non-metro cities, per the company, which cuts the brand’s reliance on crowded metro demand.
How does DailyObjects compare with rivals?
India’s tech accessories market is crowded, led by boAt, Noise and Portronics selling audio gear, wearables and chargers at mass prices. DailyObjects plays a narrower game. It focuses on premium carry and charging products and keeps about 70% of sales on its own website, per the company, which protects margins. Its roughly 50 core products look small next to mass-market rivals, yet each runs an 8 to 10 month design cycle. What sets DailyObjects apart is the blend: in-house design, premium pricing, and early moves in Qi2 and Qi 2.2 charging that most Indian rivals have not matched.
What’s Next
DailyObjects has set a clear next target: Rs 400 Cr ($42 Mn) ARR by FY27, with a longer goal of Rs 1,000 Cr in revenue. To get there, it plans to roughly double its Apple reseller counters to about 400 and open more outlets across airports and malls. Can a homegrown, design-first brand hold near 100% growth while turning EBITDA positive? The next four quarters will tell.
Frequently Asked Questions
Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.
