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AI Video startups (2026)

Sora 2 reset the floor; Runway, Synthesia, and Veo 3 are fighting over what comes next.

86 ai video startups tracked, with the largest concentration in US. Total tracked funding: $8.6B.

Tracked
86
Total Raised
$8.6B
Countries
15
Active Deals
8

Editor's picks

6

Top by score

View all 86 →

Funding by year — AI Video

2021 → 2026
$12.4M
’21
$206.6M
’22
$350.5M
’23
$1.3B
’24
$2.2B
’25
$1.7B
’26

Market overview

Sora 2 launched September 30, 2025 with synced audio, 25-second clips, and a TikTok-style social app. The leaderboard moved overnight. Runway answered with Gen-4, Pika shipped 2.0, Luma released Dream Machine 2, and Google's Veo 3 arrived inside Gemini for free. The 39 startups on this list ($4.35B in disclosed funding) split clean into three buckets after that: model labs, enterprise avatars, and editor wrappers.

Model labs vs everything else

Runway's $1.43B raised through Series E makes it the longest-tenured creative-AI lab; Gen-4 added consistent characters across shots, the missing primitive for narrative work. Pika ($215M Series B) leans consumer and viral. Kling AI's $1.2B corporate round from Kuaishou keeps a Chinese frontier alive while Western VC pauses. Luma AI ($54M Series B) keeps Dream Machine in the mix despite the smallest cheque on this tier.

Enterprise avatars are a separate business that doesn't need a Sora-class base model. Synthesia's $802M Series E (UK) compounds on 230+ language coverage and Fortune 500 training-and-comms contracts. HeyGen ($65.6M, but reportedly past $100M ARR) is the fast follower with consumer-friendly pricing. D-ID and DeepBrain AI (Korea) own pieces of the same buyer.

Editors and prosumer wrappers

Captions ($100M Series C) automates podcast and short-form cuts, captions, and clip-finding. Descript ($50M Series C) edits video by editing the transcript. Riverside owns the studio-grade recording slot. InVideo AI (India, $35M Series A) wraps text-to-video for non-creator end-users; Leonardo.Ai (Australia) and Krea AI brought real-time generation into image-and-video creative suites.

Music-rights and compute

The music-rights tension is real and unresolved — Sora 2 and Veo 3 both ship with synthesized audio, and licensing for soundtracks is the next litigation front after Suno and Udio. Compute is the structural margin headwind: video is many frames of image-class inference plus temporal-coherence work, and consumer ARPU is not multiples higher than image generation. The teams that survived raised capital before the bar moved (Runway, Synthesia) or wrap generation in workflow software where AI is one feature (Captions, Descript).

Key trends 2026

  • Sora 2 set the new floor. OpenAI's Sept 2025 launch added synced audio and 25-second clips; every model lab spent Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 chasing parity, and Runway Gen-4, Pika 2.0, Luma Dream Machine 2, and Veo 3 are the answers.
  • Avatar platforms are recession-proof. Synthesia's $802M Series E and HeyGen's reported $100M+ ARR show enterprise training and localization spending compounds independently of model-leaderboard drama.
  • Editor wrappers are the prosumer winner. Captions, Descript, and Riverside collapse podcast and short-form workflows that used to take editors days into single-prompt jobs.
  • Music-rights is the next lawsuit front. Sora 2 and Veo 3 both generate audio; soundtrack licensing is the unresolved exposure for every video-AI product after Suno and Udio.

Benchmarks vs global

Total funding tracked
$4.35B
Runway + Synthesia + Kling = ~78%
Tracked startups
39
3 buckets: labs / avatars / editors
Sora 2 clip length
25 sec
with synced audio
US concentration
32%
UK, China, Korea, AU all hold seats

Top countries

By startup count

Stage breakdown

Latest round type
  • Seed 29
  • Series A 13
  • Series B 10
  • Series C 4
  • Series E 2
  • Pre-Seed 2
  • Corporate 2
  • Series D 1

Top investors backing AI Video

See all →

FAQ

Frequently asked

How did Sora 2 change the AI video market?
Sora 2 launched September 30, 2025 with synced dialogue, sound effects, and 10-25 second clips, plus a TikTok-style remix app. It cleared the bar for paid commercial use and forced the entire model-lab tier to upgrade — Runway Gen-4, Pika 2.0, Luma Dream Machine 2, and Google Veo 3 were all 2025-Q4 or 2026-Q1 responses to the new baseline. Consumer expectations reset overnight.
Why is Synthesia worth $802M raised?
Synthesia (UK, Series E) sells avatar-driven video for corporate training, marketing, and localization in 230+ languages. The buyer is Fortune 500 L&D and comms — not creators, not ad agencies. That market spends on multi-year contracts, doesn't need a frontier model, and is largely insulated from Sora 2 dynamics. HeyGen is the consumer-priced fast follower; D-ID and DeepBrain AI hold smaller positions.
Can prosumer video tools survive Sora's social app?
Captions, Descript, and Riverside survive because they sell editing-and-recording workflow, not pure generation. Sora generates clips; Captions edits a podcast into 30 short-form clips with auto-captions and beat-matched cuts. Different jobs, overlapping tech. InVideo AI and Leonardo.Ai compete more directly on text-to-video and are more exposed.
What's the music-rights problem in AI video?
Sora 2 and Veo 3 generate audio with their video. That audio includes synthesized music, and music labels have been litigating against Suno and Udio since 2024 over training-data reproduction. Soundtrack licensing for AI-video output is the next legal front, and every commercial deployment is exposed until courts or licensing deals settle the question.
Why is video AI more compute-constrained than image AI?
A video clip is many frames of image-class inference plus temporal-coherence work to prevent flickering and character drift. Cost-per-output is multiples higher than image generation, but consumer willingness-to-pay is not multiples higher. Margin survival comes from enterprise pricing (Synthesia, HeyGen) or wrapping generation inside broader workflow software (Captions, Descript).

Recent rounds in AI Video

All rounds →
Date Startup Round Amount
May 2026 Decart Other $300M
May 2026 Reactor Series A $59M
Apr 2026 ShengShu Technology Series B $290M
Mar 2026 Captions Growth $75M
Mar 2026 Video Rebirth Series A $30M
Mar 2026 AIsphere Series C $300M
Feb 2026 Runway Series E $315M
Jan 2026 Synthesia Series E $200M

All AI Video startups

Page 4

Lightricks

IL

The AI technology company empowering creativity through an open ecosystem of AI tools and models.

Raised
$340M
Stage
S-D
17

Topaz Labs

US

Professional-grade photo and video editing powered by AI.

17

Synthesys

GB est. 2020

Generate engaging AI videos with realistic voices and avatars, offering a complete AI content suite for scalable content creation.

17

Async

The only AI Video Editor you need to create and edit videos effortlessly by chatting with AI.

17

Picsart

US est. 2011

The AI creative platform for 130M+ creators, turning any idea into scroll-stopping content.

Raised
$195M
Stage
S-B
17

Hedra

Create consistent images and videos with AI to power your social media, sales, and marketing collateral.

15

SoulGen

All-in-one AI video generator with motion, sound, and talking characters.

15

Vozo AI

US est. 2023

Translate every layer of your video: voice, subtitles, lip-sync, and on-screen text

14

Pollo AI

The ultimate AI video & image creation platform for effortlessly generating viral videos and hyper-realistic images.

14

Viggle AI

Remix anyone into viral memes with serious tech and silly fun.

14

Argil

Generate high-performing videos with your AI clone or choose from engaging avatars for promotion, education, and entertainment.

14

AKOOL

Turn ideas into reality with a premium Gen AI video suite for marketing, training, and communication.

14

Fliki

Transform text into stunning videos with lifelike AI voices and dynamic AI video clips.

14

Vidnoz AI

Create engaging AI videos 10x faster and for free, leveraging a vast library of avatars, voices, and templates.

14