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Europe’s AI startups look stateside for bigger checks, quicker deals

Mint Hyderabad

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October 06, 2025

Within a week of landing in San Francisco, Brandon Abreu Smith had something that had eluded him for months in London: $500,000 in pre-seed funding for his artificial intelligence-based workflow startup, Structured AI.

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Smith and his co-founders had been working 9-to-5 jobs and thought the startup world was out of their reach before heading to the U.S. Now, they have money to hire engineers and recently won a spot at Y Combinator, the famed Silicon Valley accelerator.

"SF is where it all happens," Smith said.

The British entrepreneur is among a new crop of European tech founders seeking to raise their first checks across the Atlantic, and in some cases moving their fledgling businesses there too.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.

The U.S. has long wooed European startups with a deeper pool of capital and a more risk-tolerant culture. But with Al's heavy upfront costs for powerful computing infrastructure and specialist talent, founders say the pull of America is greater than ever.

That's a concern for Europe, which wants to establish itself as a global AI hub to rival the U.S. and China. The region's inability to create big tech firms is also seen as a reason why its economies are stagnating.

While Europe's venturecapital scene has grown in recent years, it still lags behind the U.S. American AI and machine-learning startups raised more than $160 billion in the first nine months of this year, far outstripping the roughly $20 billion pulled in by those in Europe, according to data provider PitchBook.

U.S. investors also account for a growing share of the money raised by AI startups in Europe. As of Sept. 30, they had spent about $14.2 billion across 549 European AI and machine-learning VC deals this year, up from $11.7 billion in all of 2024, PitchBook data show. That represents 71.1% of deals by value, up from 57.5% last year.

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