Swap Commerce has secured a $100 million Series C, co-led by DST Global and ICONIQ, cementing its aggressive push to become the unified operational backbone for global brands. The London-born company, which now operates five global hubs, is explicitly targeting the fragmentation inherent in modern e-commerce by replacing dozens of point solutions—from inventory management to cross-border logistics—with a single operating system.
The funding arrives shortly after Swap’s $40 million Series B, raised in early 2025, which focused heavily on expanding its AI-driven inventory and cross-border capabilities. That earlier round positioned Swap as a critical solution for brands navigating increasingly complex global trade rules, tariffs, and logistics headaches. The new capital signals that major investors believe the future of commerce infrastructure lies not just in the storefront (where Shopify dominates) but in the sophisticated, unified operations layer beneath it.
Swap CEO Sam Atkinson defines the mission as building the future of “agentic commerce.” This is more than just a buzzword; it refers to a system that doesn’t just process transactions but anticipates intent, manages stock autonomously, and optimizes global fulfillment without constant manual intervention.
The platform already powers over 600 brands. For these users, the value proposition is clear: consolidating fragmented data and workflows. As global trade is projected to reach nearly $8 trillion by 2030, the ability to manage duties, taxes, and inventory across multiple jurisdictions from one login is becoming a necessity, not a luxury. Swap aims to be the indispensable partner for brands seeking international scale without the operational chaos.
For the industry, Swap’s success will be measured by how quickly it can convince established brands to abandon their existing, multi-vendor operational stacks for a single, centralized OS built for the age of AI-driven logistics.


