Venture Debt Sees 12% Growth in 2025: Report
Venture debt funding for Indian startups grew by 12% in 2025, reaching $1.38 billion across 187 deals, as per a recent report by Stride Ventures. This growth underscores the increasing acceptance of venture debt as a mainstream financing option within India’s burgeoning startup ecosystem.
### The Rise of Venture Debt
The report, titled “The Global Private Debt Report 2026: A Venture & Growth Credit Lens,” highlights a significant shift in India’s private debt landscape. Venture debt has become a critical financing tool, particularly at the Series A and B stages, which accounted for 60% of the deals and 51% of the capital. The average ticket size for these transactions was $3.5 million, reflecting a growing confidence among startups to leverage debt for early-stage growth.
The fintech sector emerged as the top recipient, securing $600 million, followed by consumer ($188 million) and cleantech ($108 million) sectors. This trend indicates a strategic alignment of venture debt with sectors poised for rapid growth and innovation.
### Geographic and Sectoral Concentration
Venture debt remains heavily concentrated in India’s primary startup hubs, with Delhi NCR and Bengaluru accounting for nearly three-fourths of total deployment. This concentration highlights the maturity and attractiveness of these ecosystems for structured capital.
Beyond venture debt, growth credit is gaining momentum as an institutional financing layer for late-stage and private equity-backed companies. In 2025, growth credit deployment reached $1.68 billion across 32 deals, with an average ticket size of $52 million. Fintech again led this segment, followed by consumer, B2B, and industrial sectors. Unlike venture debt, growth credit has a more distributed presence across Mumbai, Delhi NCR, Bengaluru, and Hyderabad, aligning with larger, more mature companies.
### Implications for India’s Startup Ecosystem
The report suggests that over 70% of founders anticipate increased usage of private debt in the coming years. This is driven by a demand for non-dilutive capital, faster execution, and flexible financing structures. Venture capital investors view debt as a complementary tool to extend runway and foster capital-efficient growth.
India’s startup financing landscape is evolving towards a more integrated model, combining early-stage equity with venture debt, and followed by growth equity and growth credit at later stages. This layered approach mirrors mature global ecosystems, signaling India’s shift towards a more institutionalized funding environment.
As venture debt and growth credit continue to gain traction, they are expected to play a pivotal role in shaping the future of India’s startup ecosystem. This evolution could lead to more robust and diversified financing options, fostering a resilient and innovative entrepreneurial landscape in the country.



















