Catalan ecosystem emerges as a European outlier
Catalonia has quietly become one of Europe’s most striking examples of gender progress in tech entrepreneurship. According to new ecosystem data, around 40% of startups in the region now include at least one female founder, placing Catalonia well ahead of most European hubs where women remain a small minority on founding teams.
The figure is notable in a continent where women typically account for less than a third of startup founders and secure only a fraction of available venture capital funding. While overall parity is still distant, Catalonia’s performance suggests that targeted policy, ecosystem design and visible role models can move the needle in a relatively short period of time.
Why Catalonia is pulling ahead
Local stakeholders credit a mix of structural and cultural factors. Public agencies and accelerators in Barcelona and other Catalan cities have launched dedicated programs for women-led companies, from early-stage mentoring to investor matchmaking. Universities and business schools have also integrated entrepreneurship tracks that actively highlight female leadership.
Crucially, a growing roster of successful women founders in sectors such as deep tech, digital health and fintech has created a visible pipeline of role models. These founders are increasingly present on conference stages, in angel networks and on cap tables, reinforcing a culture where mixed-gender founding teams are seen as standard rather than exceptional.
Why much of Europe still lags behind
Across the wider European landscape, progress has been slower. Structural barriers such as unequal access to early-stage finance, limited representation of women in VC partnerships and persistent bias in investment decision-making continue to depress the number of women at the helm of new ventures.
In many markets, support for female founders remains fragmented, consisting of short-term initiatives rather than integrated strategies that link education, incubation, funding and leadership visibility. This patchwork approach contrasts with the more coordinated efforts seen in Catalonia, where regional government, universities and private investors have aligned around the goal of a more inclusive startup economy.
Implications for Europe’s innovation agenda
Analysts warn that Europe’s inability to fully harness female entrepreneurial talent is not only a social equity issue but a drag on innovation and economic growth. Regions that mirror Catalonia’s approach — combining data-driven policy, targeted funding and strong networks for women founders — are more likely to capture new high-growth companies and jobs.
For now, Catalonia serves as a test case: a European ecosystem where nearly half of startups are no longer founded by men alone. The question for the rest of the continent is whether it can replicate those conditions at scale, or risk falling further behind in the global race for inclusive, high-impact entrepreneurship.

