Philly raised a massive $2.2B in Q1 2026 VC, clustered among few companies
The region closed 150 deals last quarter, but with some of the biggest ones, it’s unclear how much of that money will actually flow into the region.
Philadelphia’s venture capital market continues to show strength, but deal flow appears to be concentrated in a few big transactions, aligning with national trends.
The region brought in $2.17 billion across 150 deals in Q1 2026, according to the latest Venture Monitor report, released quarterly by PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association. If the numbers stand, that would be the third highest quarterly total on record.
However, Q1’s numbers reflect a few huge raises, some of which are from companies that aren’t actually headquartered in the region.
“When you strip [the small number of very large transactions] out, the capital available to the rest of the market is quite limited,” Howard Lubert, area president of angel investor network Keiretsu Forum Mid-Atlantic, told Technical.ly.
Last quarter’s high numbers are largely due to the region’s top deal, a $500 million raise from World Liberty Financial, a blockchain-based financial platform with ties to the Trump family. The company’s headquarters is listed in Wilmington, Delaware, although it does not appear to actually be based there.
The region’s fifth-largest deal from the quarter, a $100 million raise from information technology company Decart, similarly appears to be listed as a Wilmington company, but not actually based there.
Startups raised less in Q4 2025, which saw $1.77 billion and 125 deals. At the time, the data showed a strong end to 2025 after a few rocky quarters at the beginning of the year due to macroeconomic uncertainty. Revised data showed that the total amount of venture capital raised for 2025 was $4.11 billion across 493 deals, more than the previous year.
These deals also show that Philadelphia aligns with national concentration trends, Lubert said. The Q1 report explained that nationally, venture capital is seeing even more concentration than it has been over the last few years.
“Liquidity is still tight, the IPO window remains mostly closed, and founders and fund managers outside that top tier are navigating a market that looks very different than the numbers suggest,” Nizar Tarhuni, executive vice president of research and market intelligence at PitchBook, said.
Just because the data shows high numbers does not mean that capital is widely available to founders, Lubert said. Not only does concentration skew the data, but it also restricts available capital for the rest of the market.
“When a handful of companies absorb the majority of dollars, thousands of other quality opportunities are competing for what remains,” Lubert said.
Philly produces durable companies
Without the region’s top deal, Philadelphia still raised over a billion dollars last quarter.
Local life sciences companies Third Arc Bio and Alveus Therapeutics brought in around $200 million each last quarter, taking the third and fourth spots in the quarter’s top raises.
Philly has never been a “hype cycle market,” Antonia Dean, partner at Black Operator Ventures, told Technical.ly. The region typically doesn’t see local companies raising huge rounds at inflated valuations that end up failing down the line.
“What we tend to see being built here are more durable companies,” Dean said.
Seeing some local companies raise such big rounds indicates to Dean that the region has the resources to help companies grow and keep them here, she said.
Investors will remain selective in 2026
For the rest of the year, Lubert predicts that access to capital will continue to be uneven and investors will continue being selective. Until there is broader exit activity, investors won’t see returns on their investments and capital will stay concentrated.
The time it takes for companies to exit is getting longer, Dean said. Because of that, limited partners are being more careful about which firms they give their money to.
This means that early-stage investors and managers at smaller funds are going to be even more selective about who they invest in, only choosing companies that seem likely to provide a solid return on investment.
For founders, this means they have to show real metrics, have a clear understanding of who their customer is, what their market is, and what the company’s trajectory is, Dean said.
“Founders are going to have to … be able to say to an investor,” Dean said, “$1 million in is going to translate into this many millions of dollars out in terms of revenue, output, value created within the company.”