Indian AI startup Sarvam AI has reached a reported valuation of $1.5 billion after raising $234 million in the first close of its Series B round, making it the highest reported Series B valuation in India’s startup history.
The round, led by HCLTech, is expected to reach about $300 million in total. The valuation puts Sarvam at the centre of India’s push to build domestic AI infrastructure at a time when governments are growing more cautious about dependence on foreign models.
We're thrilled to announce that we have raised $234M in the first close of our $300M Series B at a $1.5B valuation.@HCLTech and @BessemerVP have joined us in this round, alongside continued support from @khoslaventures and @peakxvpartners For countries and companies,… pic.twitter.com/k3h1isqkRq
— Sarvam (@SarvamAI) June 15, 2026
Sarvam builds large language models, speech tools, translation systems, and AI agents designed for Indian languages and local use cases. Its focus is on voice-first AI, public services, enterprise tools, and regional-language access.
That strategy fits the broader idea of sovereign AI. In simple terms, sovereign AI means a country wants more control over the models, data, computing systems, and AI services that power its economy and government.
The concept has gained new relevance after the recent Anthropic Fable 5 and Mythos 5 controversy in the US.
Anthropic said it had to disable the models for all customers after US restrictions barred access for foreign nationals, including some foreign-national employees.
The case showed how quickly access to advanced AI systems can change when national security, export controls, or policy pressure enter the picture. For countries such as India, that risk strengthens the case for building domestic alternatives.
However, sovereign AI does not mean full independence. India still depends on global chips, cloud providers, and open-source research. Sarvam’s bet is more practical: build AI systems that work for India’s languages, rules, institutions, and scale.
That is why the funding round matters beyond valuation. It signals that investors and policymakers now see AI infrastructure as a strategic asset, rather than just another software market.