Google’s AI Futures Fund is entering a collaboration with Accel to identify and finance emerging artificial intelligence companies based in India or founded by the Indian diaspora.
This partnership is the first of its kind for the dedicated Google fund, aiming to cultivate domestic AI innovation.
The firms announced they will jointly commit up to $2 million in seed funding for each selected startup through Accel’s existing Atoms program, with each entity contributing a maximum of $1 million. The 2026 cohort cohort will specifically target founders developing AI-native products from inception. This strategic move recognizes India’s substantial digital user base and deep engineering talent pool, positioning the country as a crucial emerging market for AI development.
However, the nation currently trails the U.S. and China in frontier model creation and technical advancement.
Accel partner Prayank Swaroop indicated that investments will span diverse applications, including coding assistance, creative tools, and enterprise software reshaping the future of work.
The initiative seeks to capitalize on India’s expanding cloud infrastructure and relatively low operational costs to foster global AI products.
Beyond capital, selected companies will receive extensive support, including $350,000 in compute credits across Google Cloud, Gemini, and DeepMind platforms. Founders gain early access to advanced models, APIs, and experimental features developed by Google’s research divisions.
This support structure is comprehensive, incorporating mentorship from Accel partners and Google technical leads, alongside immersion opportunities at key global events like Google I/O. Jonathan Silber, director of the Google AI Futures Fund, confirmed the objective is to accelerate the next wave of AI innovation originating from the region.
The collaboration occurs within a broader context of increased global attention on India’s AI sector, evidenced by recent office announcements from competitors like OpenAI and Anthropic.
This heightened investor interest suggests a growing belief that Indian ecosystems can translate local demand into original, scalable AI research. Silber clarified that while Google will secure an equity stake, the partnership is not explicitly structured as a pipeline for future cloud contracts or immediate acquisition targets. The primary performance indicator remains the successful incubation of novel AI technologies emerging from the supported founders.
