Vanagon Ventures launches €20 million fund for Europe’s DeepTech and AI
Munich-based venture capital firm Vanagon Ventures has secured a €20 million fund dedicated to tackling what it sees as a critical financing gap in Europe’s earliest-stage DeepTech and artificial intelligence (AI) ecosystem. The new capital will be deployed at the pre-seed and very early seed stages, with a focus on founders emerging from Europe’s universities, research institutes and technical talent pools.
Positioning itself as a specialist in complex, science-driven innovation, Vanagon Ventures aims to support teams building foundational technologies rather than incremental software products. The firm’s strategy is to back companies long before they attract mainstream investor attention, at a point where risk is high but potential impact on European competitiveness is substantial.
Targeting Europe’s DeepTech funding gap
Across the continent, policymakers and industry leaders have repeatedly highlighted a structural shortfall in pre-seed capital for DeepTech and AI. While Europe produces world-class research in fields such as machine learning, robotics, quantum technologies and advanced materials, many projects struggle to secure the first institutional cheque needed to leave the lab and enter the market.
Vanagon Ventures is explicitly designed to address this disconnect. The fund intends to invest in startups that are still validating their technology, building initial prototypes or securing early pilot customers. These are stages that traditional venture capital funds often consider too early or too technically uncertain, especially when long development timelines and regulatory hurdles are involved.
By concentrating on this under-served layer of the market, the Munich firm hopes to convert more of Europe’s scientific excellence into globally competitive companies, particularly in AI infrastructure, industrial automation, climate and energy technologies, and data-intensive software with strong defensibility.
Munich as a DeepTech launchpad
The decision to base Vanagon Ventures in Munich underlines the city’s growing status as a European DeepTech hub. Home to institutions such as the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and major industrial players in automotive, manufacturing and engineering, the region offers a dense concentration of technical talent, corporate partners and research infrastructure.
Munich’s ecosystem has seen a surge of AI startups, robotics ventures and industrial software companies in recent years, many of which emerge directly from university labs or spin out of established engineering firms. For a pre-seed investor focused on complex technology, proximity to this pipeline of ideas and specialists is a strategic advantage.
Vanagon Ventures plans to leverage this location by forming close ties with universities, entrepreneurship centers and corporate innovation units across Germany and wider Europe. The firm’s goal is to identify promising teams early, help them refine their commercial strategy and prepare them for follow-on funding from larger funds.
Investment thesis: from lab to market
The new €20 million vehicle will typically write initial tickets in the lower six-figure range, with capacity for follow-on investments as portfolio companies hit technical and commercial milestones. Rather than chasing short-term traction, the firm’s thesis is rooted in long-term value creation built on defensible intellectual property and differentiated AI algorithms or hardware.
According to the fund’s positioning, priority areas include:
- AI and machine learning platforms that improve data efficiency, model robustness or developer productivity.
- Industrial DeepTech such as robotics, computer vision and automation tools that modernize manufacturing and logistics.
- Climate and energy technologies that apply advanced materials, sensors or AI-driven optimization to reduce emissions and resource use.
- Infrastructure software enabling secure, scalable deployment of AI and data-intensive applications in regulated sectors.
Beyond capital, Vanagon Ventures positions itself as a hands-on partner, offering support in areas such as go-to-market strategy, IP protection, regulatory navigation and preparation for larger Series A rounds. This combination of technical understanding and company-building support is intended to de-risk DeepTech ventures at their most fragile stage.
Strengthening Europe’s position in AI and DeepTech
The launch of the fund comes amid intensifying global competition in AI and DeepTech. While the United States and China continue to dominate late-stage funding and platform-scale companies, Europe is seeking to carve out an edge in trusted, industrial and research-driven innovation. New vehicles like Vanagon Ventures are part of a broader effort to ensure that European breakthroughs translate into homegrown champions rather than being commercialized elsewhere.
Industry observers note that the bottleneck is rarely a lack of ideas. Europe’s universities and research organizations routinely publish influential work in computer science, materials engineering and applied physics. The challenge is building the bridge from paper to product: recruiting founding teams, securing early industrial partners, and assembling the capital stack required to bring complex technologies to market.
By focusing explicitly on this translation phase, the Munich-based fund aims to help Europe retain ownership of key technologies and capture more of the economic value they generate. The firm’s approach aligns with policy initiatives at both national and EU level that seek to expand DeepTech financing, streamline regulation for innovative companies and encourage collaboration between academia and industry.
Outlook for founders and investors
For early-stage founders working on technically ambitious projects, the arrival of Vanagon Ventures adds another specialized option to Europe’s funding landscape. Entrepreneurs in AI, robotics, advanced software and other DeepTech segments often report that generalist investors struggle to assess their risk profile, leading to slower fundraising and pressure to simplify their vision.
A dedicated pre-seed fund with a mandate for complex technology could shorten that path. With €20 million earmarked for the earliest stages, the firm is expected to back a portfolio of dozens of companies over the coming years, acting as a feeder for larger European and international funds that can support later growth.
For the wider venture ecosystem, the fund’s launch is another signal that specialized capital is becoming a defining feature of the European market. As competition for standout deals intensifies, investors with deep domain expertise in DeepTech and AI are likely to play an increasingly central role in shaping the next generation of European technology leaders.

