What Was Approved
The Government has announced the Start-up India Fund of Funds 2.0 (FoF 2.0) with a total corpus fund of ₹10,000 crore to support deep tech venture, Tech-Driven Manufacturing, Early Growth Stage Companies and Sector-Agnostic Start-ups. The Union Cabinet approved the scheme in February 2026 and the formal notification followed in April 2026.
How the Money Actually Work
This is not a direct grant to start-ups. The government invests capital in SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs), which in turn invest in start-ups: particularly in deep-tech, tech-driven manufacturing and early-growth sectors. This model allows specialised investors to evaluate and manage investments rather than the government picking companies directly.
The scheme is operationalised by SIDBI (Small Industries Development Bank of India), which channels the capital to eligible AIFs. AIFs supported under the scheme are required to invest at least two times the amount they receive into start-ups. DPIIT is the monitoring agency.
The ₹10,000 crore will be deployed through commitments to eligible AIFs spread across the 16th and 17th Finance Commission cycles.
What the First Fund Achieved
The first fund launched in 2016, backed 145 venture capital funds. Those funds put money into over 1,370 start-ups from agri-tech to space tech. Total capital deployed: more than ₹25,500 crore.
The broader picture is harder to ignore. India had under 500 recognised start-ups when Start-up India launched. Today that number crosses 2 lakh. 2025 alone saw more new start-up registrations than any year before it.
What FoF 2.0 Focuses On – and Why
Despite the first fund’s success, consistent challenges remained, especially in deep-tech funding, early-stage capital gaps and limited reach in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities. FoF 2.0 directly targets these gaps.
Priority investment areas include:
- Deep tech start-ups, early growth-stage start-ups supported by smaller AIFs, technology-driven and innovative manufacturing start-ups and sector or stage-agnostic start-ups.
- Specific technologies in focus include AI, robotics, biotech and clean energy – sectors that require long gestation periods and patient capital.
The Multiplier Effect
Under the first fund, every ₹1 committed by the government helped attract approximately ₹9 from private investors, resulting in total venture capital mobilisation exceeding ₹90,000 crore. The government expects a similar or better multiplier from FoF 2.0.
DPIIT-recognised start-ups had generated over 1.9 million direct jobs as of October 2025. FoF 2.0 is expected to expand this further.
What It Does Not Solve – Yet
India’s start-up funding is still far behind major economies. In 2025, U.S. deep-tech start-ups raised about $147 billion. That’s roughly 80 times more than India. China, in comparison saw around $81 billion in funding. The capital gap versus global competitors remains wide.
Exit pathways also need attention. Deep-tech companies require patient public market investors willing to hold through long commercialisation phases, something India’s institutional investor base is still developing.
Conclusion
FoF 2.0 follows a model that demonstrably worked and refines it toward sectors with higher risk and higher long-term value. The ₹10,000 crore is not a magic number, but a catalyst designed to pull in multiples of private capital. Whether it closes India’s deep-tech funding gap depends on how well the AIF selection, monitoring and exit ecosystems perform over the coming Finance Commission cycles.