Romania’s startup ecosystem raised €316 million in 2025—a 140% increase from 2024—with a single robotics deal (Dexory’s €143M Series C) nearly matching the previous year’s total funding volume. Bucharest has transformed from an outsourcing hub known for cheap developers into a genuine innovation center producing billion-dollar category leaders in AI, robotics, cybersecurity, and SaaS. The city now hosts 15+ active early-stage VC funds writing €100k–€5M checks, backed by success stories like UiPath ($35B valuation at IPO 2021), BitDefender ($600M+ revenue), and Druid AI (€86M raised). For founders, Bucharest offers a rare combination: world-class technical talent at 40–60% lower costs than Western Europe, growing local capital availability, and direct pathways to CEE and Western European markets that London and Berlin VCs often overlook.
This guide breaks down exactly how Romania’s VC ecosystem works, who the key Bucharest-based funds are and what they invest in, funding benchmarks by stage, how to approach Romanian investors as local or international founders, and the unique advantages that make Bucharest one of Eastern Europe’s fastest-growing tech hubs.
Table of Contents
- The Romanian startup ecosystem: from outsourcing to innovation
- Bucharest VC landscape: key funds and ticket sizes
- Funding volumes, stages, and sector focus
- Success stories and ecosystem maturity
- How to approach Romanian investors
- Advantages and challenges of the Romanian ecosystem
- Frequently asked questions about Romanian venture capital
1. The Romanian startup ecosystem: from outsourcing to innovation
1.1 From outsourcing hub to startup nation (2000–2025)
For two decades, Romania was known primarily as an IT outsourcing destination. Companies like IBM, Oracle, and Microsoft established development centers in Bucharest and Cluj-Napoca, leveraging strong technical education (Romania ranks top 10 globally in programming competitions) and low labor costs.
But starting around 2015, a shift began:
Romanian engineers stopped building for others and started building their own companies. UiPath (robotic process automation) launched in 2005, struggled for a decade, then exploded—reaching $35 billion valuation at its 2021 IPO and validating that Romanian founders could build global software leaders.
Government support increased. Startup
visa programs, R&D tax credits, and EU co-investment funds made early-stage capital more accessible.
Ecosystem infrastructure emerged. Accelerators (Techcelerator, Spherik Accelerator), co-working spaces (Impact Hub Bucharest), and ecosystem organizations (Romanian Startup Association) created support networks.
By 2025, Romania had graduated from “cheap developers” to “genuine innovation hub.”
1.2 2025: Record year and inflection point
Total capital raised in 2025: €316 million across 40+ deals—up 140% from €132 million in 2024.
Largest rounds:
- Dexory: €143M Series C (robotics and AI logistics solutions), led by Eurazeo, Atomico, DTCP
- Druid AI: €27M Series C (enterprise AI agents), led by Karma Ventures, TQ Ventures, GapMinder
- Cyberhaven: €90M Series D (data security), Romanian co-founders, US-based
Key trend: AI-native and capital-intensive technologies (robotics, enterprise AI, deep tech) dominated 2025 funding, replacing the fragmented SaaS and consumer app deals of 2024.
Investor shift: International investors (Atomico, Eurazeo, Karma Ventures) co-led Romanian deals alongside local funds—signaling that Romanian startups are no longer “CEE bets” but global category leaders.
1.3 Bucharest vs Cluj: dual tech hubs
Romania has two major tech centers:
Bucharest (capital, 2M population):
- Largest funding volume (60%+ of Romanian deals)
- More VC funds headquartered (Early Game Ventures, GapMinder, Gecad Ventures)
- Stronger for B2B SaaS, fintech, enterprise software
- Better access to international investors and customers
Cluj-Napoca (northern Romania, 300k population):
- Strong university talent pipeline (Babeș-Bolyai University, Technical University of Cluj-Napoca)
- Lower operating costs than Bucharest
- Growing ecosystem but smaller funding volume
- Better for bootstrapping and remote-first startups
Most funds invest across both cities, but Bucharest dominates deal flow and investor density.
2. Bucharest VC landscape: key funds and ticket sizes
2.1 Early-stage funds (pre-seed and seed)
| Fund Name | Ticket Size | Stage | Focus Areas | Notable Portfolio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early Game Ventures | €500k–€5M | Seed, Series A | Infrastructure for emerging economies, B2B SaaS | Vatis Tech, Roboself, Meshine |
| GapMinder VC | €500k–€5M | Seed, Series A | AI, deep tech, B2B SaaS | Druid AI, TypingDNA, Humans.ai |
| ROCA X | €100k–€1M | Pre-seed, Seed | Disruptive Romanian tech | Early-stage Romanian founders |
| Underline Ventures | $250k–$1M | Pre-seed, Seed | Founder-first, Eastern European talent | CEE tech founders |
| Simple Capital | €25k–€1M | Pre-seed, Seed | Angel-backed early tech | Early-stage Romanian startups |
| Inspire Capital | €100k–€2M | Pre-seed, Seed | Romania and CEE ambitious founders | Regional tech startups |
| SeedBlink | €100k–€2M | Pre-seed, Seed | VC-style tech crowdfunding platform | Platform-based investments |
2.2 Growth and sector-focused funds
| Fund Name | Ticket Size | Stage | Focus Areas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gecad Ventures | $500k–$5M | Seed, Series A | Cybersecurity, SaaS, fintech |
| V7 Capital | €250k–€2M | Seed, Series A | Scalable tech ventures in SEE |
| 3TS Capital Partners | €3M–€15M | Growth, Series B+ | CEE growth capital, tech scale-ups |
| Catalyst Romania | €1M–€5M | Growth | Digital economy, SME scaling |
2.3 Corporate and strategic funds
| Fund Name | Ticket Size | Focus | Parent Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gecad Ventures | $500k–$5M | Cybersecurity, SaaS | Gecad Group (BitDefender parent) |
| ROCA X | €100k–€1M | Romanian innovation | ROCA Industry (industrial group) |
2.4 International funds active in Romania
Romanian startups increasingly attract international co-investors:
- Atomico (UK): Backed Dexory (€143M Series C)
- Eurazeo (France): Co-led Dexory Series C
- Karma Ventures (Estonia): Led Druid AI Series C
- TQ Ventures (Germany): Backed Druid AI
- Earlybird Digital East (Germany): Active in CEE, including Romania
- Lakestar (Switzerland): Participated in Dexory
These funds typically co-invest with local Romanian VCs who provide market knowledge and operational support.
3. Funding volumes, stages, and sector focus
3.1 Funding by stage
Pre-seed: €25k–€300k
Typically friends & family, angels, or funds like Simple Capital, ROCA X. SeedBlink’s crowdfunding platform also active at this stage.
Seed: €300k–€2M
Primary stage for Romanian VC activity. Funds like Early Game Ventures, GapMinder, Underline Ventures, Inspire Capital are active. Often syndicated with 2–3 investors.
Series A: €2M–€5M
Romanian funds often co-lead with international investors. Examples: Early Game Ventures, GapMinder, Gecad Ventures partner with Western European VCs.
Series B+: €5M–€15M+
Primarily international funds (Atomico, Karma Ventures, 3TS Capital). Romanian companies at this stage often have international HQs (UK, Netherlands) but development teams in Romania.
3.2 Sector strengths
Romanian VCs focus on verticals where Romania has competitive advantages:
Cybersecurity:
BitDefender (€600M+ revenue) created a cybersecurity talent pool. Gecad Ventures specifically targets this sector. Examples: Bit Sentinel, SecureFlag.
Enterprise AI and automation:
UiPath’s success inspired wave of RPA and AI startups. Examples: Druid AI (enterprise AI agents, €86M raised), Humans.ai (synthetic media), Vatis Tech (speech-to-text).
Robotics and hardware-software integration:
Dexory (€143M Series C) leads logistics robotics. Roboself (autonomous mobile robots) also funded.
B2B SaaS:
Especially vertical SaaS for SMEs, HR tech, and productivity tools. Strong engineering talent makes SaaS natural fit.
Fintech:
Growing sector, especially payments, lending, and crypto. Netopia (payments), FintechOS (banking infrastructure).
HealthTech and BioTech:
Emerging sector. Examples: Regina Maria (healthcare services, private equity-backed), MedLife (largest private healthcare network).
3.3 Geographic distribution
Bucharest: 60–70% of Romanian startup funding flows to Bucharest-based companies. Dominates deal activity, talent, and investor concentration.
Cluj-Napoca: 20–25% of funding. Strong university ecosystem, growing startup scene, but most scale-ups relocate to Bucharest or internationally.
Timișoara, Iași, Brașov: 10–15% combined. Regional hubs with university talent but limited local capital.
4. Success stories and ecosystem maturity
4.1 UiPath: The validation (2005–2021)
Founded: 2005 in Bucharest by Daniel Dines and Marius Tîrcă
Business: Robotic Process Automation (RPA)—software robots that automate repetitive business tasks
Trajectory:
- Bootstrapped 2005–2015 (struggled for a decade)
- 2015: Pivot to RPA, early traction
- 2017: $30M Series A led by Accel
- 2018: $225M Series B at $3B valuation
- 2019: $568M Series D at $7B valuation
- 2021: IPO at $35B valuation (peak)
- 2025: ~$10B market cap (post-correction but still massive)
Impact: Proved Romanian founders could build $10B+ global software companies. UiPath alumni founded dozens of Romanian startups, seeding ecosystem.
4.2 BitDefender: Cybersecurity leader
Founded: 2001 (parent company Gecad Group founded 1990)
Business: Cybersecurity software (antivirus, endpoint protection)
Scale: €600M+ annual revenue, 1,800+ employees, 500M+ users globally
Funding: Private equity-backed, not VC
Impact: Created cybersecurity talent pool in Bucharest. Gecad Ventures spun out to invest in next generation of Romanian cyber startups.
4.3 Recent category leaders
Dexory (€165M raised):
Robotics and AI for warehouse logistics. Series C (€143M) in 2025 led by Atomico, Eurazeo—largest Romanian VC round ever.
Druid AI (€86M raised):
Enterprise AI agents platform. Series C (€27M) in 2025. Backed by Karma Ventures, GapMinder, TQ Ventures.
Cyberhaven (€90M Series D):
Data security platform. Romanian co-founders, US-based. Raised €90M in 2025.
4.4 Exits and liquidity events
Challenges: Exit market remains thin. Most Romanian startups exit via:
- IPO abroad (UiPath on NYSE)
- Acquisition by Western European or US buyers (smaller deals, €10M–€50M range)
- Private equity buyouts (BitDefender, MedLife)
Lack of large domestic acquirers: Romania has few large tech companies buying startups. Most exits require international buyers.
Secondary markets limited: No robust secondary market for early employees/investors to sell shares before exit.
5. How to approach Romanian investors
5.1 Local founders: leverage ecosystem density
If you’re Romanian or based in Bucharest:
Warm intros are critical: Bucharest is a small, relationship-driven ecosystem. One intro from a portfolio founder, accelerator mentor, or ecosystem connector (Romanian Startup Association, TechHub Bucharest) opens doors faster than cold emails.
Show international ambition: Romanian investors fund global plays, not local-only businesses. Frame: “We’re starting in Romania/CEE, expanding to Western Europe, then globally.” Don’t pitch “Romanian market only.”
Emphasize technical depth: Romanian VCs value engineering excellence (UiPath legacy). Highlight strong tech team, proprietary IP, or deep tech advantages.
Use ecosystem programs as validation: If you’ve participated in Techcelerator, Spherik Accelerator, or SeedBlink crowdfunding, mention it—signals third-party validation.
5.2 International founders: why target Romanian VCs
If you’re outside Romania, Romanian investors make sense if:
You’re targeting CEE markets: Romanian VCs have networks across Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic—markets Western European VCs don’t deeply understand.
You’re opening Romanian R&D hub: Romania offers strong technical talent at 40–60% lower costs than Western Europe. VCs facilitate local hiring, legal setup, and government incentive access.
You’re in cybersecurity, AI, or B2B SaaS: Sectors where Romanian VCs have pattern recognition and value-add (Gecad for cyber, GapMinder for AI, Early Game for B2B).
You want capital-efficient partners: Romanian VCs understand building with less burn. If you’re bootstrapping to product-market fit, they appreciate lean execution more than growth-at-all-costs VCs.
5.3 Positioning your pitch
For local founders: “We’re solving [Romanian/CEE pain point] with global applicability. We’ve proven product-market fit in Romania (X customers, Y revenue). Raising €500k to expand to Poland and Czech Republic, then Western Europe.”
For international founders: “We’re expanding to Romania as our R&D hub to access top engineering talent. Your portfolio includes similar companies—how did they navigate local hiring and customer acquisition? We’re targeting Romanian VCs specifically for your CEE networks.”
5.4 Expected timelines and process
Romanian VCs move at European pace:
- Seed: 6–10 weeks from warm intro to term sheet (assuming traction)
- Series A: 10–14 weeks, often with international co-leads requiring extra diligence
Be ready for in-person meetings in Bucharest. Remote pitches work, but relationship-building happens face-to-face.
5.5 Building your Romanian investor pipeline
When building your Bucharest fundraising list:
- Segment by stage: Pre-seed specialists (Simple Capital, ROCA X) vs seed leaders (Early Game, GapMinder) vs growth (3TS Capital, Gecad Ventures)
- Sector fit: Match your vertical to fund thesis (Gecad for cybersecurity, GapMinder for AI, Early Game for B2B SaaS)
- Check portfolio overlap: If you’re enterprise AI, study Druid AI’s cap table. If cybersecurity, research who backed Bit Sentinel
- Leverage ecosystem connectors: Romanian Startup Association, TechHub Bucharest, SeedBlink platform for warm intros
Platforms like Fundreef help you filter investors by these criteria—search “Romania + your sector + your stage,” identify 10–15 target funds, research their portfolios for warm intro paths, and prioritize based on recent deal activity.
6. Advantages and challenges of the Romanian ecosystem
6.1 Advantages for founders
World-class technical talent:
Romania ranks top 10 globally in programming competitions (IOI, ACM ICPC). Strong computer science programs at University of Bucharest, Politehnica, Babeș-Bolyai Cluj.
40–60% lower operating costs:
Engineering salaries €20k–€50k (vs €60k–€120k in Western Europe). Office space, infrastructure, and living costs significantly cheaper.
Growing local capital:
15+ active VC funds, €300M+ deployed annually (2025), increasing availability of pre-seed to Series A capital.
EU membership benefits:
Access to EU grants (Horizon Europe, EIC Accelerator), free movement of talent and goods, GDPR compliance infrastructure.
Strategic location:
Bucharest is 2–3 hours flight to Western Europe, Balkans, and Turkey. Easy access to underserved CEE markets.
Diaspora network:
Millions of Romanians in Western Europe, US, Canada bring capital, mentorship, and customer intros back to Romanian startups.
6.2 Challenges and limitations
Small domestic market:
Romania’s 19M population limits B2C and local B2B plays. Founders must think international from Day 1.
Thin exit market:
Few large domestic acquirers. Most exits require international buyers (harder to close, longer timelines).
Limited late-stage capital:
Series B+ funding requires international investors. Few Romanian funds write €10M+ checks.
Brain drain risk:
Top talent still leaves for London, Berlin, Silicon Valley. Remote work helps retention but senior VP-level talent (sales, marketing, product) is scarce.
Bureaucracy:
Romanian business registration, tax compliance, and legal processes remain slower and more complex than Western Europe.
Perception gap:
Despite UiPath, Dexory, Druid AI, some Western investors still view Romania as “emerging market” rather than innovation hub.
Frequently asked questions about Romanian venture capital
How much venture capital is available in Romania?
Romania raised €316 million across 40+ funding rounds in 2025, up 140% from €132 million in 2024. The ecosystem has 15+ active VC funds, with ticket sizes ranging from €25k (pre-seed) to €5M+ (Series A). Largest 2025 rounds: Dexory €143M Series C, Druid AI €27M Series C, Cyberhaven €90M Series D.
Who are the key VC funds in Bucharest?
Major Bucharest-based funds: Early Game Ventures (€500k–€5M, B2B SaaS), GapMinder VC (€500k–€5M, AI and deep tech), Gecad Ventures ($500k–$5M, cybersecurity), ROCA X (€100k–€1M, pre-seed), Underline Ventures ($250k–$1M, CEE talent), SeedBlink (€100k–€2M, crowdfunding platform), Inspire Capital (€100k–€2M, Romania/CEE).
What sectors do Romanian VCs focus on?
Cybersecurity (BitDefender legacy, Gecad Ventures focus), enterprise AI and automation (UiPath success, Druid AI), robotics and hardware-software (Dexory), B2B SaaS (strong engineering talent), fintech (payments, lending), and emerging healthtech. Romanian VCs prioritize sectors where Romania has talent and competitive advantages.
What are Romania’s biggest startup success stories?
UiPath ($35B IPO valuation in 2021, $10B market cap 2025), BitDefender (€600M+ revenue, 500M+ users), Dexory (€165M raised, robotics/AI logistics), Druid AI (€86M raised, enterprise AI agents), Cyberhaven (€90M raised, data security). UiPath validated that Romanian founders can build global software leaders.
How do I approach Romanian VCs as an international founder?
Target Romanian VCs if expanding to CEE markets, opening Romanian R&D hub for talent arbitrage, or building in cybersecurity/AI/B2B SaaS. Emphasize why Romania specifically (not just “cheaper engineers”). Secure warm intros through portfolio founders, ecosystem organizations (Romanian Startup Association), or accelerators. Be ready for in-person meetings in Bucharest.
What are the advantages and challenges of the Romanian ecosystem?
Advantages: World-class technical talent (top 10 globally in programming), 40–60% lower operating costs, growing local capital (€300M+ annually), EU membership benefits, strategic CEE location, diaspora network. Challenges: Small domestic market (19M population), thin exit market (few Romanian acquirers), limited late-stage capital (Series B+ requires international funds), brain drain, bureaucracy.
Suggested visuals to create
- Romanian VC landscape map
Geographic map showing Bucharest as dominant hub (60–70% funding) and Cluj-Napoca as secondary (20–25%), with key funds, portfolio companies, and connections to international co-investors (Atomico, Karma Ventures, Eurazeo). - Bucharest VC funds by stage and ticket size
Table listing 12–15 funds with columns: Fund name, Ticket range, Stage (pre-seed/seed/A), Sector focus, Notable portfolio companies. - Romanian startup funding timeline
Line graph showing total capital raised from 2015 (early days) to 2025 (€316M record), with annotations for key milestones (UiPath IPO 2021, Dexory €143M Series C 2025, ecosystem inflection points).
