Quick Take
- India strategic exit value crossed $1 Bn (Rs 8,300 Cr) in 2025, up from $65 Mn in 2024.
- L’Oreal bought a majority stake in D2C brand Innovist, valued near $350-450 Mn (Rs 2,900-3,735 Cr).
- Four deals above $100 Mn each drove the rebound, signalling a buy-not-build shift by acquirers.
In This Article
India is seeing a Startup M&A Boom, as strategic exit value crossed $1 Bn (Rs 8,300 Cr) in 2025, a sharp jump from about $65 Mn (Rs 540 Cr) the year before, according to the Bain-IVCA India Venture Capital Report 2026.
The revival marks a clean turnaround from 2024, when strategic sales had nearly vanished as an exit route for venture investors. Large consumer goods firms and global chipmakers are now buying Indian startups instead of building rival products from scratch. The biggest signal came last week, when French beauty giant L’Oreal acquired a majority stake in personal care startup Innovist, India’s largest direct-to-consumer (D2C) deal yet.
StartupFeed Insight
The Startup M&A Boom is not just bigger cheques, it is a structural reset in how Indian startups return cash to backers. Strategic sales accounted for about 15% of all startup exits in 2025, per Bain-IVCA, which lets investors show distributions to paid-in capital (DPI) earlier in a company’s life. Seasoned founders and early employees should watch closely, because staged exits with minority stakes first, full buyout later, are becoming a default template. StartupFeed predicts at least three more $100 Mn-plus strategic buyouts of Indian D2C and fintech startups before March 2027, as global brands chase digital-first Indian consumers. By StartupFeed Desk.
Startup M&A Boom: The Numbers
The Startup M&A Boom in 2025 was led by four large strategic deals, each valued above $100 Mn (Rs 830 Cr). Strategic exit value surged to over $1 Bn (Rs 8,300 Cr) from roughly $65 Mn (Rs 540 Cr) in 2024, the Bain-IVCA report found.
| Metric | Detail | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 Strategic Exit Value | Over $1 Bn (Rs 8,300 Cr) | Bain-IVCA Report 2026 |
| 2024 Strategic Exit Value | About $65 Mn (Rs 540 Cr) | Near-record low |
| Share Of Total Exits | About 15% | In 2025 |
| $100 Mn+ Deals | Four | Drove the rebound |
| Largest D2C Deal | L’Oreal-Innovist, $350-450 Mn | Announced June 18, 2026 |
The most striking fact is the scale of recovery: strategic exit value rose more than 15 times in a single year. This jump shows that buyers now see Indian startups as ready-made platforms, not risky bets.
About Innovist
Innovist is a science-led, digital-first personal care company in India, founded in 2019 by Rohit Chawla, Sifat Khurana and Vimal Bhola. It runs popular brands such as Bare Anatomy, Chemist at Play and Sunscoop, built on clean formulations and in-house research. The Mumbai-rooted firm sells through its own websites, e-commerce, quick commerce and offline stores, and is now majority-owned by global beauty leader L’Oreal.
Why Are Strategic Buyers Buying Now?
Strategic buyers are acquiring Indian startups now because buying a proven brand is faster than building one from zero. A maturing startup ecosystem and a growing appetite among large firms are driving this Startup M&A Boom, executives say.
“This partnership with L’Oreal brings together a deep alignment in vision and product philosophy, along with global scientific innovation resources to grow this ambition,” said Rohit Chawla, Founder and CEO of Innovist.
For L’Oreal, the Innovist deal is its first Indian acquisition in nearly 13 years, since it bought Cheryl’s Cosmeceuticals in 2013, per company filings. Acquirers are now paying a premium for startups that already have product-market fit and loyal digital users. You can read L’Oreal’s official deal announcement on its corporate finance page.
Which Deals Powered The Surge?
The Startup M&A Boom was powered by deals across consumer brands, fintech and deep-tech. Beyond L’Oreal-Innovist, the standout was the sale of edge-AI chip startup Kinara to global chipmaker NXP Semiconductors for $307 Mn (Rs 2,548 Cr), confirmed by NXP’s official filing.
| Buyer | Startup Acquired | Sector |
|---|---|---|
| L’Oreal | Innovist | D2C Beauty |
| NXP Semiconductors | Kinara AI | Edge-AI Chips |
| Marico | 4700BC, Cosmix | Consumer Foods |
| Meesho | KiranaClub | B2B Commerce |
Other moves included USV buying Wellbeing Nutrition and Pine Labs acquiring Shopflo. What sets this wave apart is its spread across very different sectors, not just one hot category.
What Does This Mean For Founders?
For founders, the Startup M&A Boom opens a real exit route beyond an initial public offering (IPO). Strategic sales now give early backers and employees a way to recycle capital and talent into new startups.
“We are seeing a renewed willingness among both global and Indian buyers to invest in or acquire new-age consumer brands,” said Neeraj Shrimali, Managing Director, Digital, Tech and Consumer Investment Banking at Avendus Capital.
Investors gain too, as strategic exits help them show DPI earlier and book some liquidity before a full IPO. Clean, structured deals also free seasoned founders to build the next generation of companies, a cycle StartupFeed expects to deepen through 2026.
What’s Next
The L’Oreal-Innovist deal is expected to close in the coming months, after regulatory approvals, with L’Oreal holding rights to fully buy out minority shareholders later. If this Startup M&A Boom holds, more global brands may chase digital-first Indian startups in beauty, food and fintech through 2026 and 2027. Which sector do you think will see the next billion-dollar exit?
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Last updated: June 22, 2026 at 10:15 IST
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. StartupFeed and its authors are not SEBI-registered investment advisors. The analysis above is based on publicly available information and should not be the sole basis for any investment decision. Please consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Written by Avinash. Published: June 22, 2026. Updated: June 22, 2026. Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.
