From canine feed and fertiliser, to B2B gross sales and educating entrepreneurship, the native startups which have raised contemporary funding this week are as diverse as they’re formidable.
We’ve counted six Australian startups with new funding offers this week, with a collective complete of greater than $123 million raised.
Preserve studying to be taught extra.
Lyka: $67 million
Contemporary pet food subscription startup Lyka has raised $67 million in a Sequence C spherical led by New York-based VC agency LGVP.
This follows a $30 million Series B round in 2022 that was topped as much as $55 million in 2023.
Based by former Bain & Firm advisor Anna Podolsky, Lyka delivers personalised, freshly ready meals to canines through a direct-to-consumer subscription mannequin.
The corporate says it has grown to round $200 million in annual recurring income and now serves greater than 100,000 lively canines throughout Australia.
The pitch centres on tailor-made diet designed to assist long-term well being, at a time when Australian pet homeowners are spending an estimated $21.3 billion yearly on their animals, with meals accounting for near half that determine, in keeping with Animal Medicines Australia.
Lyka additionally factors to its B Corp certification and carbon-negative standing as a part of its differentiation technique in a crowded pet meals market.
PlasmaLeap: $28 million

Sydney startup PlasmaLeap Applied sciences has raised US$20 million (AU$28 million) in a Sequence A spherical to scale back carbon emissions in fertiliser and gas manufacturing.
The elevate, closed in January, was co-led by the Gates Foundation, Investible and Yara Progress Ventures, the VC arm of nitrogen fertilisers producer Yara Worldwide. Extra assist got here from Twynam, GrainCorp Ventures, Uniseed/UniSuper, Artesian, SVG Ventures and Kiwi fertiliser cooperative Ravensdown’s Agnition Ventures.
The funds will go to first-of-a-kind fertiliser hubs in New South Wales and Tasmania, expanding field trials, and developing PlasmaLeap’s core technology as it looks to support longer-term use in sustainable fuels and energy systems.
PlasmaLeap, founded in 2019 and spun out of the University of Sydney, is developing zero-emissions chemical reactors for the synthesis of green fuels and chemicals. They enable farmers to produce sustainable nitrogen fertiliser directly on their farms or at local hubs, to cut emissions, input costs, and supply-chain dependency.
The PlasmaLeap modular reactors produce ammonia and nitrate using only air, water, and renewable electricity.
Ammonia is the primary ingredient in most nitrogen fertilisers, a core input for agriculture and worth around $100 billion globally a year. Its production, transport, and application accounts are also major contributors to carbon emissions.
Firmable: $14 million

Synthetic intelligence B2B gross sales startup Firmable has raised $14 million in a Sequence A spherical for growth into the US.
The funding was led by present investor Airtree, which led the earlier $9 million elevate in October 2023. Different buyers embrace former Pacific Manufacturers CEO Sue Morphet, A Cloud Guru co-founder Sam Kroonenburg, Redbubble’s Martin Hosking, and Aconex co-founder Rob Phillpot.
The brand new capital will go in direction of its US rollout in addition to additional improvement of specialist gross sales knowledge and shopping for indicators, and the build-out of AI brokers to execute actions for gross sales groups.
Firmable was co-founded by former Aconex trio Leigh Jasper, Paul Perrett, and Karthik Venkatasubramanian in 2023 to enhance gross sales productiveness with new AI instruments and approaches.
It took a patchwork of knowledge and software program instruments and merged them right into a single platform underpinned by proprietary account knowledge to trace shopping for indicators and automate gross sales duties and administration.
The platform now has greater than 1,000 prospects, together with CBRE, Eftsure, G2, Robert Half, Monday.com, Marsh, and Canon, working in Australia and New Zealand in addition to eight markets within the Asia-Pacific area.
Veyor: $10.5 million

Logistics startup Veyor has raised $10.5 million in Sequence A funding, valuing the enterprise between $50 million and $75 million, because it expands additional within the US.
The round was led by international venture capital firm Marbruck Investments, with participation from CoAct and returning investors Investible and SpringCapital. This follows a $2.75 million pre-Series A round in 2024.
Veyor builds operational software program that digitises web site logistics and supplies coordination. The corporate says that is an space of development that’s nonetheless often managed by means of electronic mail chains and spreadsheets.
The platform capabilities as a real-time system of file for deliveries and materials flows, bringing collectively contractors, suppliers, tenants and operators throughout complicated tasks and property.
The US now accounts for greater than 30% of its income and is rising at greater than 150% yr on yr. The corporate helps greater than 60 prospects throughout 30-plus US states and expects the US to exceed 50% of complete income inside 12 to 24 months.
Lumonus: $3 million

Lumonus, which produces care administration and session software program for oncologists, has confirmed a $3 million extension to its $25 million Sequence B spherical.
Investible and Brandon Capital provided the top-up, joining Aviron Investment Management and Oncology Ventures, which contributed the first block of Series B funding in November.
Investible’s Nicholas Ooi said Lumonus and its AI-enabled tools are streamlining treatment planning, saving oncologists time while helping them provide a better patient experience.
“Many providers are seeking workflow solutions that can better connect the consult, documentation and planning process in a seamless way,” Ooi said, in the firm’s latest investment note.
“With increasing patient volumes and ongoing staffing constraints, the need for efficient, intelligent infrastructure to support care teams has never been greater.”
Ooi said the $3 million contribution, which brings the Series B total to $28 million, will help Lumonus and CEO Keith Hansen double down on its US expansion plans.
“We couldn’t be more excited to be backing Keith and the rest of the leadership team as they look to transform oncology care globally using AI!” said Ooi.
Future Minds Community: $650,000

Edtech social enterprise Future Minds Community has secured $650,000 in new funding to additional scale its entrepreneurship program for college kids in low-income and regional communities.
Based in 2018 by CEO Nathaniel Diong, Future Minds Community goals to open up entrepreneurship pathways for college kids who don’t full Yr 12 by giving them a chance to launch their very own companies and acquire formal tutorial credit score from partnering universities.
This includes a six-week, industry-backed program of interactive workshops delivered each in-person and on-line, protecting design pondering, prototyping, and problem-solving.
The brand new funding will assist the social enterprise construct a brand new on-line platform, deepen {industry} partnerships and broaden its attain.
Thus far, Future Minds Community has supported 13,000 youth nationwide and works with younger individuals aged 15–18 from low-income and regional communities throughout Australia, prioritising faculties with an ICSEA score below 1000, which is a national indicator of socio-educational disadvantage.

