In 2026, artificial intelligence has become the dominant driver of European venture funding, with roughly half of all investments directed toward AI-related companies. This surge includes frontier model labs as well as startups in data centers, semiconductors, robotics, aerospace, defense, biotech, and applications across legal, customer service, and fintech sectors. The energy sector, critical for AI compute, has also attracted significant funding. Overall, startup funding in Europe rose by a third year over year in Q4 and Q1, surpassing $17 billion each quarter.
Europe is witnessing momentum in AI talent hubs, particularly with new frontier labs. Former DeepMind employees have launched Recursive Superintelligence and Ineffable Intelligence in London, while Yann LeCun established Advanced Machine Intelligence in Paris. Together, these three labs raised $2.6 billion this year. Other notable players include Germany’s Black Forest Labs, Mistral with $4 billion raised since 2023, Synthesia, and Aleph Alpha, which recently merged with Canada’s Cohere to form a $20 billion transatlantic competitor to U.S. model companies. Despite these advances, European labs have raised only a fraction compared to U.S. giants.
The European 100 cloud challenger report highlights that 81% of early-stage companies are now AI-native, up from 50% a year ago. Many of these firms are concentrated in dev tools, infrastructure, industrials, and robotics. Europe’s advantages include strong engineering talent and retention, with founders increasingly thinking globally from the outset rather than waiting until later funding stages. Teams are also leaner ahead of Series A compared to earlier vintages.
Despite this progress, European funding growth continues to lag behind the U.S. since 2024. American model companies like OpenAI and Anthropic have raised $254 billion since 2023, cementing San Francisco’s Bay Area as the epicenter for ambitious AI founders. Many European startups still relocate to the U.S. early in their journey to access capital, customers, and a faster “ambition gradient.” UK-founded incubator Entrepreneurs First moved to the U.S. in 2024, incorporating its funded companies there, while global investors like Antler emphasize the need for startups to capture large markets quickly before U.S. competitors dominate.





