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From robotics to the metaverse, Indian tech startups are not just building products, they’re building the future. And many of them have found their spotlight on Shark Tank India, a platform that’s become a launchpad for India’s next-gen innovators.
In the first half of 2025, India’s tech startup ecosystem has already raised $6.99 billion across 817 equity funding rounds, according to data from Tracxn. This builds on a strong Q1 performance, where funding touched $3.1 billion, marking a 41% year-on-year growth over Q1 2024, as reported by Inc42. India’s startup ecosystem is now thriving on a mix of strong investor interest and platforms like Shark Tank India, which are helping innovative ideas go mainstream by offering funding, mentorship, and nationwide visibility.
It is a new generation of tech startups that appeared on Shark Tank India, which is redefining the face of innovation in the country. Not only are these ventures bringing in innovative technologies but also addressing real-life problems with scalable future solutions.
The uniqueness of these startups seen on Shark Tank India is that they incorporate advanced technologies not as a supplement to the product or service, but as the master architecture of the product or service. They can be AI, IoT, AR/VR, computer vision, and autonomous systems or anything, but these ventures incorporate a fundamental technology foundation to eliminate high-friction issues in diverse fields.
Instead of following western models, these startups are inventing localized solutions that fit into the Indian-specific infrastructure gaps, user behavior and constraints of operations. As examples, the use of AI-powered Braille learning tools in low bandwidth settings, or the sensor-based mapping of road quality at scale, all these technologies are based on the possibility and local adaptation.
These startups have underlying tech stacks, frequently modular and interoperable, cloud-native, scalable across regions, and designed for diverse use cases. Most of them follow agile development methodologies, incorporate AI/ML systems trained with locally gathered datasets, and target mobile-first interface UI/UX design, making them efficient on both technical and practical levels.
Though their solutions are based on grass-root problems, the platforms upon which they are built are designed to be competitive all over the world. Their APIs, data layers, and systems of UX design are exportable. This not only makes them an Indian tech experiment, but also major players in any region that has a similar degree of systemic inefficiency.
As a matter of fact, such startups are changing towards the development of tech-first and problem-solving businesses that are fundable, scalable, as well as technologically distinct within the rapidly globalized innovation ecosystem.
Shark Tank India has become so much more than a platform for consumer goods, D2C brands, and it’s a potent source of starting point of the emerging tech-startups in India. In the course of the show, a moderate change toward deep tech, AI-based platforms, smart gadgets, and immersive technologies has been observed. A shift as such reflects what is happening to the startup ecosystem in India as a whole, with entrepreneurs no longer simply striving to create something convenient, but rather becoming future makers. It could be using robotics to combat real-world industry inefficiencies, offering equality of education and healthcare through smart devices, or even opening a new chapter of digital communication via the metaverse, in all these cases, startups are challenging the limitations of possibility.
With the emphasis it puts on these ventures, not only is Shark Tank India a funding source of innovation, but it is democratizing it as well. The show lights up the concepts which could never get out of labs or the local markets and opens them to a national audience which has potential investors, users and collaborators. By so doing, it is quickly building up the tech-first startup culture in India and demonstrating the ability of local innovation to transform across the world.
These are some of the notable startups that appeared at the Shark Tank India to provide access to advanced technologies that can address practical issues and are all driven by innovation.
Founded in 2018 by Pranav Nair and Tanvi Rao, PNT Solutions began with a clear vision to make industrial automation accessible and affordable for India’s MSME sector. What started as a two-person engineering project has grown into a full-fledged robotics company, offering custom, plug-and-play automation systems that are both cost-effective and scalable. Today, their solutions, ranging from welding robots to intelligent assembly arms, are helping small and medium industries modernize operations using the power of IoT and AI.
LOKA was founded in 2020 by Krishnan Sunderarajan, with the vision to bring India’s real-world cities into the metaverse. What started as a passion project quickly evolved into India’s first gamified metaverse social app, combining multiplayer gaming, location-based services, and virtual reality. By recreating iconic Indian cities in a virtual space, LOKA allows users to meet, shop, and play in environments that feel familiar yet futuristic. The app is now riding the wave of the booming global metaverse market, expected to reach $936 billion by 2030.
Proxgy was founded in 2020 by Pulkit Ahuja, driven by the idea of redefining remote presence through innovative technology. Positioned as the world’s first human proxy platform, Proxgy blends IoT, augmented reality (AR), and real-time video streaming to let users send a human proxy to events, shops, or locations they can’t attend themselves. Their flagship product with a smart helmet with a 360° camera that enables live, immersive experiences, making it a game-changer for B2B operations, inspections, and virtual tours.
Founded in 2021 by Aniket Das and Riya Mehra, this innovative retail-tech startup is transforming online shopping through AI-driven 3D and AR product experiences. By allowing e-commerce brands to showcase products in interactive, hyper realistic formats, it helps customers make better purchase decisions, boosting engagement, and reducing returns. Known for its device-agnostic visual technology, FUTR Studios is pushing the boundaries of how products are seen, felt, and bought in the digital world.
Founded in 2017 by IIT Kanpur alumnus Vikram Singh, this deep-tech startup is solving critical logistics challenges with drone-based delivery systems. Focused on connecting remote and rural areas, the company builds long-range, heavy payload drones capable of flying up to 100 km on a single charge. With a strong foundation in aerospace engineering, TechEagle is playing a key role in enabling last-mile delivery, especially healthcare and essential supplies in underserved regions.
Kibo by Trestle Labs was founded in 2017 by Nishant Gadihoke, Sriram Rajamani, and Abhinav Choudhary with the goal of making information truly accessible to all. Built with a focus on inclusion and assistive technology, Kibo is an AI-powered platform that converts both printed and digital content into real-time audio output. It empowers visually impaired individuals and audio learners by giving them instant access to books, documents, and web content, anytime, anywhere.
Thinkerbell Labs, founded in 2016 by Sanskriti Dawle, Saif Shaikh, Aman Srivastava, and Dilip Ramesh, is redefining inclusive education through innovative assistive technology. Their flagship product, Annie, is the world’s first self-learning Braille device that uses AI and gamification to teach visually impaired students in an engaging, independent way. Supported by global organizations like Google and UNICEF and gaining wide attention after their appearance on Shark Tank India, Thinkerbell Labs is making Braille education more accessible across classrooms and learning centers worldwide.
Dozee, founded in 2015 by Mudit Dandwate and Gaurav Parchani, is revolutionizing healthcare with its AI- and IoT-powered contactless monitoring system. Designed to convert any regular bed into a smart health tracker, Dozee enables continuous monitoring of vital signs like heart rate, respiration, oxygen saturation, and sleep quality, without any wires or wearables. Widely adopted in hospitals and home care setups, it helps caregivers provide proactive, remote health management while reducing the burden on healthcare staff.
Spandan ECG, developed by Sunfox Technologies, was founded in 2016 by Rajat Jain with the mission to make cardiac care accessible and affordable, especially in India’s rural and untapped areas. The startup created a pocket-sized ECG device that connects to a smartphone and delivers real-time heart diagnostics, eliminating the need for bulky, expensive hospital equipment. With ease of use and affordability, Spandan is transforming early detection and monitoring of heart conditions, bringing critical healthcare to the last mile.
Founded by Rahul Gupta in 2019, RoadBounce mobility-tech startup is transforming how we assess road conditions using AI and smartphone sensors. By turning everyday devices into powerful road-scanning tools, the platform detects potholes, cracks, and surface irregularities in real time. Governments, municipalities, and infrastructure agencies use the data to prioritize maintenance and improve safety. Today, the company is helping cities make roads safer, smarter, and more cost-efficient, one scan at a time.
With the digital and physical worlds becoming less and less distinct, it is now India and its tech-fueled startups that are in the best position to spearhead the next global innovation revolution, one that is built on the foundation of being accessible, adaptive, and scalable. Not only is the culture of platforms like Shark Tank India investing in early-stage founders, but they are also changing the cultural context of what it means to be a tech private equity in India. It is no longer about coding apps in your garage or getting investment money from Silicon Valley; it is now about creating purposeful tech that has meaning, in complete transparency to everyone with mass feedback and validation.
More to the point, this migration of investor interest toward deep tech, automation, AI and frontier technologies, is creating the conditions of a different form of startup driven economy where problem-solving is favored over hype, and hyperlocal knowledge is an input for global translatable solutions. As policy makers, academia and even accelerators in the private sector come on board, the ecosystem is slowly riding a jugaad to a generational impact wave.
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