Emergent Raises $130M as AI Software Creation Moves Beyond Developers

Image by Emergent
The next software platform may not begin with a blank code editor. It may begin with a business owner describing a problem.
Emergent has raised $130 million in Series C funding at a $1.5 billion valuation, making the AI software creation company a unicorn roughly one year after its public launch.
Creaegis led the round, with MNI Ventures–Claypond Capital and Sentinel Global joining as co-leads. Khosla Ventures, SoftBank Vision Fund 2, Lightspeed, and Y Combinator also participated. The financing brings Emergent’s disclosed funding to $230 million.
Building software through conversation
Founded by twin brothers Mukund Jha and Madhav Jha, Emergent allows users to describe an application in natural language while AI agents handle design, coding, integrations, testing, and deployment.
The platform supports websites, mobile apps, internal tools, dashboards, marketplaces, and other full-stack products. Its primary audience extends beyond developers to entrepreneurs, operations teams, agencies, and small businesses that need custom software but cannot justify a large engineering team.
Emergent reports that users have built more than 12 million applications since launch. It also says 70% of users had no coding experience before joining the platform, while more than half of customers use the software they created for business-critical operations. These figures are company-reported and have not been independently audited by Tech Lens Media.
From rapid prototyping to operating software
AI app builders initially gained attention for producing landing pages and early prototypes. The more valuable opportunity is delivering software that remains usable after the first demonstration.
Emergent is positioning itself around that execution layer. Its agents do not only generate an interface; they coordinate application logic, databases, APIs, hosting, and deployment through one conversational workflow. The company’s product message is that users should be able to build production-ready software without managing the technical infrastructure underneath it.
That distinction matters for small businesses. Generic SaaS products are easier to purchase but may not match a company’s exact workflow. Traditional development can produce customized systems but often requires significant capital, specialist talent, and long delivery cycles.
Emergent is betting that agentic AI can narrow that gap.
The market is shifting from software access to software ownership
The deeper market signal is not simply that coding is becoming easier. It is that more businesses may be able to own software designed around their operations.
A roofing company could build a tailored command center instead of combining several subscriptions. A logistics operator could develop its own fleet-management system. An entrepreneur could test a digital product without first hiring a technical co-founder.
This changes the competitive pressure on conventional SaaS. Businesses may increasingly compare a fixed subscription product with an AI-generated application customized to their processes.
However, generating software is only the first test. Emergent must prove that applications built by non-technical users remain secure, maintainable, reliable, and economical as they grow. More complex products will also require stronger controls over data, permissions, testing, and architecture.
What comes next
Emergent’s rapid funding progression – from a $23 million Series A in September 2025 to a $70 million Series B in January 2026 and the latest $130 million Series C – shows how quickly investors are pricing the AI software creation category.
The next stage will be defined less by how fast an application can be generated and more by what happens after launch.
Retention, software quality, infrastructure costs, and the ability to support business-critical systems will determine whether AI app builders become durable platforms or remain powerful prototyping tools.
Emergent’s strategic bet is that software creation will move closer to the people who understand the customer, workflow, and market—even when they do not know how to code.
Source : Official Announcement
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