Top Startup Investors Of H1 2026: Venture Debt Rules The Charts

Soumya
By
Stride Ventures topped H1 2026 investor activity as venture debt firms took four of the five busiest startup funding spots.

Quick Take

  • Stride Ventures topped the top startup investors of H1 2026, backing 61 startups by deal count.
  • Indian startups raised $5.2 Bn (Rs 49,629 Cr) across 501 deals, a 9% dip year on year.
  • Venture debt firms took four of the top five spots, showing credit is reshaping startup funding.

The top startup investors of H1 2026 were led by venture debt firm Stride Ventures, which backed 61 startups between January and June 2026, more than any other investor by deal count. Indian startups raised $5.2 Bn (Rs 49,629 Cr) across 501 deals during the period, a 9% year-on-year decline in value.

The ranking is based on the total number of startup deals, drawn from funding data for the first half of the calendar year. While overall funding stayed muted, investor activity told a sharper story: private credit and early-stage capital kept flowing even as large late-stage cheques dried up. Four of the five busiest investors were venture debt providers.

StartupFeed Insight

The real signal here is not the funding dip, it is who stayed active. Venture debt firms holding four of the top five slots means founders are choosing non-dilutive credit over equity that prices them lower in a soft market. Growth-stage founders and later-stage VCs should watch this closely: as long as valuations stay under pressure, StartupFeed expects venture debt deal counts to keep climbing through H2 2026, with at least one debt fund crossing 70 startup deals for the full year. Equity mega rounds will stay scarce until pricing recovers. By Soumya Verma.

Who are the top startup investors of H1 2026?

The top startup investors of H1 2026 are ranked by the number of startup deals each closed between January and June 2026. Stride Ventures led with 61 deals, followed by Alteria Capital with 48 and Rainmatter with 39. The table below lists the ten busiest investors and their signature bets.

Investor Deals (H1 2026) Type Notable Bets
Stride Ventures 61 Venture debt Giva, Magicpin, River Mobility
Alteria Capital 48 Venture debt Euler Motors, OneCard, Country Delight
Rainmatter 39 Early-stage VC Karo Sambhav, Agilitas Sports, Lissun
Blacksoil Asset Management 37 Venture debt Rupeek, SRV Hospitals, Zanskar
WeFounderCircle 36 Angel network 1buy.ai, Ctruh, Sarva Foam
All In Capital 25 Early-stage VC Acai Theory, Plazza, Iztri
Accel 21 VC Rapido, FirstClub, Swish
InnoVen Capital 20 Venture debt River, Euler, Novio
Finvolve 19 Micro VC Matter EV, IG Defence, Constems
IAN Group 17 Angel/VC Astranova Mobility, Spector.ai, Hyugalife

The most striking fact is the gap at the top. Stride Ventures backed 61 startups, nearly three times the deal count of tenth-placed IAN Group. In February 2026, Stride secured backing from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) through its Jada Fund of Funds commitment to Stride’s Debt Fund V, giving the firm fresh firepower for its $1 Bn global deployment plan.

About Stride Ventures

Stride Ventures is a venture debt firm founded in 2019 and based in Delhi. It provides credit solutions to growth-stage startups and holds assets across seven debt funds spanning India, the GCC, the UK and Europe. Its portfolio features 20 unicorns, including Zepto and Ather Energy. The firm has enabled over $1.6 Bn in credit across nearly 200 companies, with backers now including Saudi Arabia’s PIF.

Why did venture debt dominate the rankings?

Venture debt dominated the H1 2026 rankings because founders increasingly prefer non-dilutive credit over equity in a soft valuation market. Four of the top five most active investors, Stride, Alteria, Blacksoil and InnoVen, are venture debt providers. The trend reflects a working-capital squeeze that pushes founders toward loans rather than down rounds.

“The GCC’s private debt market has moved from early exploration to institutional conviction. Credit is entering the capital stack earlier in the company lifecycle, especially across fintech and asset-backed models,” said Fariha Ansari Javed, Partner at Stride Ventures.

Second-placed Alteria Capital, founded in 2017 by Vinod Murali and Ajay Hattangadi, manages four funds with total deployment of over $750 Mn. Blacksoil Asset Management has deployed Rs 2,500 Cr across 110 deals. The pattern is clear: as equity investors turned cautious, credit firms filled the gap and stayed busy.

What does the H1 2026 funding climate look like?

The H1 2026 funding climate was muted overall, with total capital falling 9% year on year to $5.2 Bn (Rs 49,629 Cr), even as deal count rose 7% to 501. Late-stage funding dropped 29% to $2.2 Bn, while growth-stage funding grew 15% to $2.3 Bn. Mega rounds of $100 Mn and above fell to just five during the period.

Metric H1 2026 Change (YoY)
Total funding $5.2 Bn -9%
Total deals 501 +7%
Late-stage funding $2.2 Bn -29%
Growth-stage funding $2.3 Bn +15%
Unique investors 1,108 Stable

Investor appetite stayed resilient despite the dip. Around 64% of investors surveyed said they plan to increase venture capital allocation in the second half of 2026. Third-placed Rainmatter, Zerodha’s investment arm, closed 39 deals and manages assets worth over Rs 1,500 Cr. The firm has built a portfolio of around 160 investments across fintech, healthtech and climate, per Rainmatter’s official portfolio page. Frontier technology also drew capital: AI startup funding rose sharply, and advanced hardware funding climbed 17% to $365 Mn.

What’s Next

The second half of 2026 will test whether venture debt keeps its lead or equity investors return with bigger cheques. Watch for a full-year deal count above 70 from a single debt fund, and whether the promised jump in VC allocation actually lands as new rounds. Mega rounds remain the missing piece. Will equity mega deals recover, or will credit keep ruling India’s startup charts?

Frequently Asked Questions

Who are the top startup investors of H1 2026?
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The top startup investors of H1 2026 by deal count were Stride Ventures with 61 deals, Alteria Capital with 48, and Rainmatter with 39. Blacksoil, WeFounderCircle, All In Capital, Accel, InnoVen, Finvolve and IAN Group rounded out the top ten.

How much did Indian startups raise in H1 2026?
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Indian startups raised $5.2 Bn (Rs 49,629 Cr) across 501 deals in the first half of 2026. That marks a 9% year-on-year decline in total funding, even though deal count rose 7%. Late-stage funding fell 29% to $2.2 Bn.

Why did venture debt firms lead the H1 2026 rankings?
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Venture debt firms led because founders prefer non-dilutive credit over equity in a soft valuation market. Four of the top five investors, Stride, Alteria, Blacksoil and InnoVen, are debt providers. Credit lets founders raise working capital without accepting a lower valuation.

Which startups did Stride Ventures back in H1 2026?
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Stride Ventures backed 61 startups in H1 2026, including jewellery retailer Giva, foodtech firm Magicpin, home interiors startup AllHome and EV maker River Mobility. The firm holds 20 unicorns in its portfolio, such as Zepto and Ather Energy, and recently added Saudi Arabia’s PIF as a backer.

Did startup investors plan to invest more in H2 2026?
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Yes. Around 64% of investors surveyed said they plan to increase their venture capital allocation in the second half of 2026. Unique investor participation stayed stable at 1,108 during H1, signalling that appetite for Indian startups held firm despite the overall funding dip.

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