Enterprise software investment hits record levels
Enterprise software remained the largest VC category in 2025, building on 2024 when startups raised $155 billion and claimed 42% of all VC funding – the highest share on record.
In Q4 2025, enterprise SaaS entered what PitchBook called a "healthy new normal" with $23.6 billion across 801 deals. The exit environment strengthened: the $5.5 billion Navan IPO and Nexthink's $3 billion acquisition demonstrated strong liquidity pathways.
The defining trend is agentic AI. Salesforce's Agentforce hit $500 million in ARR, Microsoft launched AI governance tools, and startups building autonomous digital labor for DevOps, security, and operations attracted significant capital. This shift from copilots to agents that deliver measurable ROI reshapes what software investors look for.
Infrastructure, data, and analytics captured 62% of enterprise software investment in 2024, up from 23% in 2022. While this concentration may have peaked, the data layer of the AI stack continues to attract enormous capital.
Leading VC firms in enterprise software
Firms like Bessemer Venture Partners, Battery Ventures, Insight Partners, and Sapphire Ventures maintain strong positions as category-defining investors. Multi-stage firms including Sequoia, a16z, and Lightspeed remain active, with an increasingly pronounced AI-software focus.
Growth-stage investors who pulled back in 2022-2023 are beginning to re-engage for companies with strong AI integration. Corporate venture activity from Salesforce Ventures, Microsoft Ventures, and Google Ventures provides strategic distribution in addition to capital.
The convergence of enterprise software and AI means that investors increasingly evaluate software startups through an AI lens. Companies that embed AI into core workflows – not as a feature but as a fundamental product architecture – attract premium valuations.
Key Trends in Software Investment and Market Valuations
The outlook is strong. The commercial explosion of agentic AI, reopening exits, and sustained enterprise demand for cloud and AI tools provide tailwinds.Key themes include autonomous AI agents for enterprise workflows, vertical AI applications for specific industries, AI governance and security tools, and AI-native DevOps management. For founders, the current environment favors companies demonstrating efficient growth, strong net revenue retention, and deep AI integration.Explore our databases of enterprise software investors, SaaS investors, and AI investors to identify the best VC partners for your startup, or use Gilion's [investor matching](https://www.gilion.com/funding/investor-matching) to get introduced directly.
Public Market Multiples Set a New Benchmark
Public SaaS companies saw their valuation multiples drop from 2021 highs. This has reshaped VC expectations for private enterprise software startups, forcing a recalibration toward profitability and efficient growth.
Founders Shift to Capital-Efficient Growth
In response, many startups restructured for leaner operations—cutting burn, focusing on core products, and streamlining GTM teams. These actions align with investor demand for sustainable business models.
Strong Tailwinds for 2026
Looking ahead, software continues to be the most active VC category.
Key growth areas include:
AI-native enterprise applications
Cloud security and DevOps platforms
Data infrastructure and next-gen SaaS

