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Biting the dust: Only 1 out of 50 start-ups secures Series A funding within 18 months
Biting the dust: Only 1 out of 50 start-ups secures Series A funding within 18 months

New Indian Express

time18-07-2025

  • Business
  • New Indian Express

Biting the dust: Only 1 out of 50 start-ups secures Series A funding within 18 months

BENGALURU: In just one week, two start-ups -- quick fashion delivery platform Blip and AI start-up CodeParrot -- have shut down citing various reasons including funding crunch. Though it is not easy to raise funds, especially after securing seed money, what bothers the start-up ecosystem is excessive cash burn and the pressure to grow fast. TNIE spoke to many venture capitalists and investors who said lack of clear planning and in some cases even poor legal and structural hygiene are some of the reasons for start-ups shutting operations. According to data sourced from market intelligence firm Tracxn, 65,906 companies were shut down in India from January 2023 till date while a total of 7,484 start-ups were shut down from July 1, 2024 to July 18, 2025 alone. Start-ups such as Koo and Zerodha's Nithin Kamath-backed Stoa School have shut down in recent times. "Start-up shutdowns are not unusual; they are part of how a young ecosystem matures. What we're seeing now is a period of correction, brought on by a mix of internal and external challenges," said Roma Priya, founder of Burgeon Law. One major reason is the lack of product–market fit. Many start-ups go to market without fully testing whether their product solves a real and scalable problem. Founders also often face co-founder conflicts or team misalignment early on, which can slow momentum. Another common issue is limited access to funding, especially now that investors are being more selective. In addition to these, several start-ups face difficulties due to poor legal and structural hygiene, for example, unclear company structures, weak documentation, or non-compliance with regulatory norms, Priya added. Vedant Agarwala, co-founder of CodeParrot, said in a LinkedIn post that they hired and painfully had to let go of both the engineers. "We burned through the $500k we'd raised — and when we hit $1,500 MRR (monthly recurring revenue) with our final pivot (Figma-to-code using LLMs), we couldn't break through. Instead of running more experiments with a dwindling runway, we decided it was time to shut shop," he said. The co-founder also said that start-ups are brutally hard — and pivot hell is the worst part by far.

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