Synthesia snaps up $180M at a $2.1B valuation for its B2B AI video platform

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As the world continues to work through how to handle the explosion of deepfake content online, it seems that not all AI-created videos are stirring controversy. Synthesia, a London startup building products around highly realistic AI avatar technology, says it’s a big hit with enterprises, with some 60,000 of them -- 1 million users -- tapping the tech to build avatar-based videos from text documents, for sales and marketing, for training and more.

Now VCs also want to get in on the action. Synthesia today confirmed that it has closed a funding round of $180 million, a Series D that catapults the company’s valuation to $2.1 billion. NEA is leading the round, with participation from new investors WiL (World Innovation Lab), Atlassian Ventures, and PSP Growth, plus previous backers GV and MMC Ventures. Synthesia has raised $330 million to date.

The startup plans to use the funding for hiring, particularly to expand in Asia Pacific – the bulk of Synthesia’s business today is in Europe and North America – and to continue evolving its products.

“We’re doubling down on all the things we're already doing right,” said CEO and co-founder Victor Riparbelli, in an interview. “We want to make our avatars better.” He said the company’s “long roadmap” includes more realistic motion; being able to port avatars into different environments; avatars that can interact with objects to, for example, provide physical demonstrations; and avatars that can interact with users. It’s also going to be eating some of its own dogfood by building more “agents” to help customers create avatar-based content more easily.

One area where it’s not chasing activity is in M&A. Synthesia to date has made no acquisitions and Riparbelli said its preference is for building its technology in house, alongside using APIs for what it does not build itself. For example, it works with Eleven Labs for voice, and it taps and fine-tunes a variety of third-party Large Language Models instead of building its own.

Synthesia’s round has been in the works for at least a few months: The Information reported that it was raising $150 million in November 2024. For a little more fundraising context, it’s been about 18 months since Synthesia last disclosed funding: in June 2023, it closed a $90 million round on a $1 billion valuation with previous backers including Kleiner Perkins and Accel.

In the interim, AI companies have been a huge magnet for VCs, providing a bright spot in a somewhat lackluster funding landscape. AI startups accounted for more than 37% of the $368.5 billion invested across all startups in 2024 globally, according to PitchBook data. In the U.S. the proportion was even more stark, with AI startups garnering nearly 50% of the $209 billion invested last year.