Union Cabinet approved Startup India Fund
of Funds 2.0 with a corpus of ₹10,000 crore to mobilise venture capital for
India’s rapidly expanding startup ecosystem
Union Cabinet approved Startup India Fund of Funds 2.0
(FoF 2.0) with a corpus of ₹10,000 crore to mobilise venture capital for
India’s rapidly expanding startup ecosystem.The scheme has been launched under
the Startup India initiative (2016) to address early-stage financing gaps and
build on the first phase of the Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS). It aims at accelerating the “next phase” of
India’s startup journey by deepening domestic capital, strengthening the
venture capital (VC) ecosystem and backing innovation‑led entrepreneurship.VC
is a form of private equity financing provided by investors to startups and
early-stage companies with high growth potential, in exchange for equity.Aligned
with the national vision of Viksit Bharat @ 2047, the Fund represents the
Government’s continued commitment to empowering entrepreneurs, fostering
innovation, and unlocking the full potential of India’s startup ecosystem.
Key Features of the Scheme
¨
Corpus and Structure:
₹10,000 crore government-backed corpus deployed through Alternative Investment
Funds (AIFs) rather than direct startup funding, ensuring professional capital
allocation.
¨
AIFs are SEBI-regulated
investment vehicle in India that pools capital from sophisticated,
high-net-worth individuals or institutions to invest in non-traditional assets
like private equity, hedge funds, venture capital, and real estate.
¨
Sectoral Prioritisation:
Strong focus on deep technology, frontier innovation, and tech-driven
manufacturing, where long gestation and high-risk limit private investment.
¨
Lifecycle Support:
Emphasis on early-growth and scaling-stage startups, addressing the funding gap
between seed capital and commercial viability.
¨
Geographical Diversification:
FoF 2.0 seeks to push capital beyond Tier‑1 metros, enabling innovation in
Tier‑II/III cities and under‑served regions.
¨
Risk-capital
Mobilisation: Designed to crowd-in domestic institutional capital and
strengthen India’s venture capital base, particularly smaller and emerging
funds.
¨
Governance Framework: An
Empowered Committee will guide fund deployment, select AIFs, and ensure
alignment with policy priorities and prudent risk management.
Building on Fund of Funds for Startups 1.0
¨
Launched in 2016, FFS 1.0
also had a ₹10,000 crore corpus; the entire amount has been committed to 145
AIFs.
¨
These AIFs have invested
over ₹25,500 crore into more than 1,370 startups across sectors, including
agriculture, AI, robotics, automotive, clean‑tech, consumer goods, e‑commerce,
education, fintech, food & beverages, healthcare, manufacturing, space tech
and biotech.
¨
FFS 1.0 is credited with
nurturing first‑time founders, catalysing private capital and laying the
institutional foundation of India’s VC ecosystem.
¨
While FFS 1.0 primarily
plugged early funding gaps and built confidence, FoF 2.0 is explicitly tasked
with “taking Indian innovation to the next level” by focusing on deep‑tech,
advanced manufacturing and scaling‑up capital.
¨
Significance of the
Scheme
¨
Innovation-led Economic
Growth: Supports development of globally competitive technologies, products,
and platforms, strengthening India’s position in emerging industries.
¨
Manufacturing and
Self-Reliance: Channelises capital toward advanced manufacturing and strategic
technologies, complementing initiatives like Make in India and Atmanirbhar
Bharat.
¨
Job Creation and
Productivity: High-growth startups contribute to skilled employment,
productivity gains, and new value chains in the digital and industrial economy.
¨
Domestic Capital
Formation: Encourages institutional and private participation in venture
financing, reducing reliance on volatile foreign capital flows.
¨
Balanced Regional
Development: By extending funding beyond major cities, FoF 2.0 can democratise
entrepreneurship and stimulate innovation in Tier-II and Tier-III regions.
Startups
¨
Under the Startup India
framework, a startup is typically a young, innovation‑driven entity meeting
criteria related to age (less than 10 years old), turnover (now expanded up to
₹200 crore), and innovation or scalability potential.
¨
India’s startup ecosystem
has witnessed an extraordinary transformation, growing from fewer than 500
startups to over 2 lakh Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade
(DPIIT)-recognised startups today.
¨
Year 2025 marked the
highest-ever annual startup registrations.
¨
The number of unicorns
has grown from 4 in 2014 to nearly 125 active unicorns, with around half of the
startups originating from Tier II and Tier III cities.
¨
Recently, the Department
for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) has released the 5th
edition of the States’ Startup Ecosystem Ranking.
¨
Gujarat emerged as the
top performer in Category A for the fifth consecutive year, while Arunachal
Pradesh and Goa were adjudged best performers in Category B.
¨ Startups have emerged as major job creators, having generated an estimated 21 lakh jobs across the country.
¨ Presently, 31 of the 36 States/UTs have a dedicated Startup Policy.