Quick Take
- The Indus Valley raises $17 Mn (Rs 161 Cr) in a Series B led by Gaja Capital.
- DSG Consumer Partners, Rukam Capital and The Chennai Angels joined the round as existing backers.
- Funds will drive product innovation, omnichannel distribution and a Rs 1,000 Cr revenue push.
In This Article
Healthy kitchenware brand The Indus Valley raises $17 Mn (Rs 161 Cr) in a Series B funding round led by private equity firm Gaja Capital, the Chennai company said on June 30, 2026.
The round saw participation from existing investors DSG Consumer Partners, Rukam Capital and The Chennai Angels, according to the company statement. It mixes fresh primary capital with a secondary sale by some early backers. The deal ranks among the larger funding rounds in India’s direct-to-consumer cookware sector this year.
StartupFeed Insight
The secondary component is the tell here. Early angels cashing out partial stakes signals a maturing cap table, not a distress sale, since Gaja Capital is buying in at scale. StartupFeed reads this as a pre-profitability growth bet on the toxin-free cookware category, where health-led demand is pulling buyers away from coated non-stick pans. Watch the kitchenware D2C sector closely: a Rs 200 Cr to Rs 1,000 Cr run-rate jump in 4-5 years means roughly +38% compounded growth each year. We expect The Indus Valley to push offline retail expansion hard through 2027 to hit that target. By Avinash.
Deal Breakdown: The Indus Valley Series B
The Indus Valley Series B is a $17 Mn (Rs 161 Cr) growth round led by Gaja Capital, announced on June 30, 2026. The round blends primary investment with a partial secondary exit for early shareholders, according to the company statement.
| Metric | Detail | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Total Raise | $17 Mn (Rs 161 Cr) | Company statement, June 30, 2026 |
| Lead Investor | Gaja Capital | Private equity firm |
| Round Type | Series B | Primary plus secondary share sale |
| Participating Investors | DSG Consumer Partners, Rukam Capital, The Chennai Angels | Existing backers |
| Cumulative Raised | About $25 Mn to date | Across rounds since 2019 (Tracxn) |
| Announcement Date | June 30, 2026 | Reported by Business Standard, DealStreetAsia |
The standout detail is the secondary sale. It lets 2019-era angels book partial returns while Gaja Capital takes a meaningful new position in the brand.
About The Indus Valley
The Indus Valley is a Chennai-based direct-to-consumer brand selling toxin-free, non-coated cookware. Founded in 2016 by Jagadeesh Kumar and Madhumitha Uday Kumar, it sells cast iron, iron, stainless steel, triply cookware and pressure cookers. The brand calls itself India’s leading healthy cookware label and runs on an omnichannel model. Its backers now include Gaja Capital, DSG Consumer Partners and Rukam Capital.
How will The Indus Valley use the funds?
The Indus Valley will use the fresh capital to enter new product categories, strengthen omnichannel distribution and invest in brand marketing, the company said. Co-founder and CEO Jagadeesh Kumar set a clear scale target for the brand.
“We are also looking to scale the company from an annual revenue run rate of Rs 200 crore to Rs 1,000 crore in the next 4-5 years,” Jagadeesh Kumar, Co-Founder and CEO, The Indus Valley.
That target implies a fivefold revenue jump. To reach it, The Indus Valley plans deeper retail presence and wider category coverage across safer kitchen products, the company said. Health-led buying behaviour is the core demand driver it is betting on.
How does The Indus Valley compare to rivals?
The Indus Valley competes in a crowded Indian cookware market against legacy and new-age brands alike. Established names like Hawkins, Prestige and Vinod hold deep retail networks and brand trust built over decades. Newer toxin-free and D2C players are also chasing the same health-conscious buyer.
| Brand | Focus | Edge |
|---|---|---|
| The Indus Valley | Toxin-free, non-coated cookware | D2C plus health positioning |
| Prestige (TTK) | Mass-market cookware, appliances | Wide offline retail reach |
| Hawkins | Pressure cookers, cookware | Legacy brand trust |
What sets The Indus Valley apart is its single-minded focus on chemical-free, uncoated materials sold mostly online.
What’s Next
The Indus Valley now faces the hard part: turning capital into a fivefold revenue jump. The next milestone to watch is its category and retail expansion through 2027, the runway it needs to move toward its Rs 1,000 Cr run-rate goal. Success will hinge on whether health-led demand keeps pulling buyers from coated cookware. Can a toxin-free niche scale into a mass-market winner?
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Last updated: June 30, 2026 at 16:45 IST
Written by Avinash. Published: June 30, 2026. Updated: June 30, 2026. Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.
