
The AI funding wave is showing no signs of slowing down in 2026.
In just under two months, 17 U.S.-based AI companies have raised US$100 million or more—many at billion-dollar-plus valuations.
This article explores who’s raising, what kinds of AI companies are getting funded, and why it matters for marketers, especially those navigating platform risk, content automation, and generative AI investments.
Short on time?
Here’s a table of contents for quick access:
- The 17 AI companies that raised US$100M+ in 2026
- Why investors are still pouring billions into AI
- What marketers should know

The 17 AI companies that raised US$100M+ in 2026
Here’s a breakdown of the U.S.-based AI startups that have already locked in mega-rounds this year, sorted by announcement date:
January 2026
- PaleBlueDot AI (compute platform): US$150M Series B, valued at US$1B
- Decagon (conversational AI): US$250M Series D, valued at US$4.5B
- Flapping Airplanes (AI research): US$180M seed round, valued at US$1.5B
- Baseten (AI infra): US$300M Series E at US$5B
- Inferact (AI inference): US$150M seed at US$800M valuation
- OpenEvidence (medical chatbot): US$250M Series D, valued at US$12B
- humans& (AI research): US$480M seed round, valued at US$4.48B
- SkildAI (robotics AI): US$1.4B Series C, valued at US$14B
- Deepgram (voice AI): US$130M Series C at US$1.3B valuation
- Arena (LLM evaluation): US$150M Series A at US$1.7B valuation
- xAI (Elon Musk’s AI lab): US$20B Series E, later acquired by SpaceX
February 2026
- Simile (decision simulation AI): US$100M Series A led by Index Ventures
- Anthropic (AI research): US$30B Series G at a US$380B valuation. Backers include Founders Fund, Coatue, Nvidia
- Runway (media generation): US$315M Series E, valued at US$5.3B
- Goodfire (AI lab): US$150M Series B at US$1.25B valuation
- Fundamental (AI research): US$255M Series A, valued at US$1.2B
- ElevenLabs (voice AI): US$500M Series D, valued at US$11B
Why investors are still pouring billions into AI
If 2025 was the year of proving AI’s business case, 2026 looks like a year of institutional doubling-down. Several trends are fueling this acceleration:
- High-capital moats: Many of the companies in this list are infrastructure-heavy or model-intensive, where cost and compute are entry barriers.
- Multimodal expansion: Investors are betting on tools that span beyond text—into video (Runway), voice (Deepgram, ElevenLabs), and robotic applications (SkildAI).
- AI-as-agent trend: Startups like Simile and Fundamental are building toward autonomous decision systems, which could eventually act on behalf of humans—not just advise them.
- Regulatory and platform uncertainty: With tech giants increasingly under scrutiny, investors may be looking for alternatives to centralized AI platforms.
For marketers, the takeaway is clear: AI is still a VC darling, but the spotlight is shifting from novelty to defensibility and scale.
What marketers should know
Marketers don’t need to track every billion-dollar round—but the themes behind these investments offer useful signals. Here’s what stands out:
- Diversify your AI stack
As AI tools consolidate, marketers relying on single platforms may want to explore emerging alternatives for content generation, LLM evaluation, and voice applications.
- Watch for tools moving downmarket
Infrastructure players like Baseten or ElevenLabs may soon enable new SaaS layers that are marketer-friendly and cost-effective.
- Prepare for automation beyond content
Companies like Simile and Fundamental signal a shift toward AI-driven decision-making—think automated product testing, pricing adjustments, or campaign strategy.
Consider this a moment to audit your AI roadmap. Are you experimenting with the right tools? Are you building resilience against platform concentration?
Seventeen mega-rounds in under eight weeks is more than a funding spree—it’s a signal of where the industry is placing its long-term bets. For marketers, the AI wave is no longer just about chatbots and text generators. It’s now touching everything from brand voice to creative automation and operational strategy.
This funding snapshot is a cue to stay adaptive, informed, and strategically selective about where to place your own AI investments in 2026.


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