Most AI startups raise money on a promise. Sarvam raised $234 million on what it already runs.
Its tools field millions of chats a day across India's farms, banks, and insurers.
The Round
The deal values the Bengaluru firm at $1.5 billion. That makes it a unicorn, a private firm worth a billion dollars or more.
The biggest check, $150 million, came from HCLTech. Bessemer Venture Partners joined too.
So did earlier backers Khosla Ventures and Peak XV Partners. In all, Sarvam wants to raise $300 million.
That is a big jump from the start. The firm had raised just $41 million in its first two rounds, more than two years ago.
Two years ago Sarvam was barely known outside AI circles. The round is now one of India's biggest in the field.
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Why An IT Giant Wants In
HCLTech is an old tech services firm, not a startup backer. The plan is to pair Sarvam's India-built models with HCLTech's engineers and clients.
The bigger driver is sovereign AI. That means countries want their own models, not rented brains from a few U.S. firms.
It is like a country that buys all its power, then builds its own plant.
India is one of the biggest users of AI in the world. Both OpenAI and Anthropic call it their second-biggest market.
Yet India has built very few top models of its own. High compute costs and tight money are the main reasons.
Sarvam is one of the few firms trying to close that gap. For investors, the round is a bet that India will build its own AI, not just buy it.
Many in India worry about losing access to the best U.S. models. That fear is part of what makes this bet worth watching.
Already At Scale
Sarvam is not starting from zero. Its chat tools handle more than 2 million chats a day, and its systems take in about 10 million requests daily.
The reach goes well past tech, with voice tools that gathered data from 17 million farmers for India's farm ministry.
One campaign helped an insurer renew 45 million customers, while its speech tools turn over 500,000 hours of audio into text each month.
A big finance firm even uses Sarvam to back a sales team of 350,000 people.
Earlier this year the firm put out free, open models that anyone can use. Its tools already run in banking, insurance, government, and even defense.
Sarvam was started in 2023 by Vivek Raghavan and Pratyush Kumar. The two came out of a language-AI research group at IIT Madras.
That group was backed by tech leader Nandan Nilekani.
What To Watch
The new money will fund Sarvam's next models. They will focus on coding, security, and AI that can act on its own.
"Our ambition is to diffuse this technology widely in India," Raghavan said.
India has plenty of AI users, and Sarvam is betting it can be a builder too.
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