Most of the world's big ride-hailing fights are over. India's is just heating up, and Bengaluru-based Rapido just secured the cash to push harder.
The startup pulled in fresh capital at a $3 billion valuation, and Uber suddenly has its toughest local rival in years.
A Funding Round That Sets The Stage
Rapido said Friday it raised $240 million, led by global investor Prosus and joined by WestBridge Capital and Accel. The full package, including secondary deals, runs about $730 million.
That's a big jump from its $2.3 billion mark in a secondary deal last year. Co-founder Aravind Sanka said the company plans to push deeper into markets where demand is high but ride supply is "fragmented."
Founded in 2015, Rapido now runs in more than 400 Indian cities, with growth fueled by its bet on motorbikes and autorickshaws over four-door sedans. That model fits India's traffic and price points far better than the global Uber template.
Where the money goes: Driver network, technology, and what Sanka called "multi-modal" expansion - more vehicle types, more cities, faster scale.
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Why Uber Is Watching Closely
A year ago, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi flagged Rapido, not Ola, as the bigger threat in India. That ranking still stands.
Khosrowshahi visited India this week, announcing two new engineering campuses and a local data center deal. Uber also injected $330 million into its India unit earlier this year, doubling down on a market it can't afford to lose.
Rapido isn't just sticking to rides. It launched food delivery through subsidiary Ownly last year, putting it on a collision course with Swiggy and Zomato.
What To Watch
India is one of the hardest ride-hailing markets in the world, with thin margins, fast-moving regulation, and customers who won't pay a dollar more than they have to. That's why so many global players have struggled.
But there's growth here that's gone in most other markets. Rapido just secured the cash to ride that wave longer than Uber wants it to.
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