Big money is betting the self-driving future belongs to a small club

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A Waymo robotaxi driving down a road
A vast majority of funding seen from the autonomous vehicle sector this year went to Alphabet's Waymo.

David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

  • 2026 saw the largest amount of VC funding for the Autonomous Vehicle sector in more than 10 years.
  • Most of this year's capital went toward Alphabet's Waymo, which raised $16B in February.
  • AV analysts told Business Insider that the funding concentration reflects a maturing industry.

The Autonomous Vehicle sector this year has seen some of the largest venture capital backing in more than 10 years, all of which has gone toward fewer competitors.

Barely halfway through the second quarter, the AV industry has seen nearly $19 billion in VC funding worldwide as of April, PitchBook data provided to Business Insider showed. The data excludes AV-adjacent companies, such as sensor suppliers, data labeling firms, and fleet management companies.

The vast majority of that capital came from Alphabet's Waymo, which announced a $16 billion raise in February.

A Waymo spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

The rest of the money was spread across 10 other VC deals. That included companies like Wayve, a UK-based self-driving startup that raised $1.5 billion in February, and Waabi, an autonomous trucking company expanding into the robotaxi market, which announced a $750 millionroundin January.

No other year going back as far as 2014 — at the outset of the industry's first hype cycle — has seen that amount of capital allocated to less than a dozen AV players.

Prior to 2026, VC global deal activity in the sector peaked in 2021, with PitchBook data showing less than $9 billion in capital raised that year.

The money was also spread across 94 distinct deals. Waymo again led the year with a $2.5 billion raise.

Earlier this year, Uber announced partnerships with Zoox, Wayve-Nissan, and Rivian, reflecting the company's goal to become an aggregator of choice for robotaxis.

Hugh Nguyen, a KPMG partner who specializes in M&A for the automobility sector, told Business Insider that capital is no longer spread evenly across many AV startups, but is instead concentrating among vertically stacked operators and aggregator platforms such as ride-hailing companies.

"Investors learned from the 2019 capital cycle that spreading bets across companies chasing similar milestones carries risk, so the concentration we see today reflects discipline as much as it does confidence," he said. "The capital flow also illuminates the challenges that persist: operational, regulatory, and capital concentration of turning autonomy into a service."

Ro Gupta, CEO of Toyota's growth fund Woven Capital, told Business Insider that the funding seen today reflects a common industrial maturation cycle and that, as long as some competition remains, new money can start flowing to "second-order problems," such as fleet operations or maintenance, that will help the industry mature.

"If we look back at earlier cycles, such as the dawn of automotive itself," he said, "we see a pretty common pattern of experimentation, failure, success, consolidation, and 'share of pie' jockeying, naturally leading to a few strong players remaining on the chessboard."

Read the original article on Business Insider