Startup Funding Hits: Australia Secures $161M, India Pulls in $228M-$343M
Startup Funding Hits: Australia Secures $161M, India Pulls in $228M-$343M

The Facts
Startup Daily reports Australian startups raised $161 million this week, led by Advanced Navigation’s $158 million Series C from Airtree Ventures, Quadrant Private Equity, and the National Reconstruction Fund. MiAI Law got $2 million from angels including ex-Citibank counsel, while Deftbiotech raised $1 million pre-seed from Breakthrough Victoria and La Trobe University for nail fungus treatments.
In India, The Economic Times tracks $343 million across 29 deals, down 69% year-over-year per Tracxn, with Weaver Services at $156 million, Ecofy $42 million for climate finance, and Atlys $36 million for visa processing. TechStory counts $228 million for 21 firms, including Neo Group $53.4 million, Ecofy $42 million, Atlys $36 million, and Burger Singh $8.8 million for QSR growth.
Editorial Perspective
No direct ties to Shark Tank pitches here—these are deep-tech navigation, legal AI, biotech treatments, fintech platforms, and visa apps, far from typical consumer product decks. But Ecofy’s climate finance for small businesses and Burger Singh’s restaurant expansion overlap with Daymond John’s branding and distribution interests. Worth sharing: it maps the funding flow entrepreneurs track before stepping into any pitch room.
What This Means
Entrepreneurs in health tech like Deftbiotech or consumer apps like Atlys see paths to early cash, but India’s year-over-year drop signals tighter wallets—focus on niches like climate tools for small businesses. Consumers get new nail treatments or easier visas soon. Families and owners face a pickier investor pool; prove traction fast or pivot to underserved spots like QSR growth.


