Saxon Baum
Venture capital activity in the Miami–Fort Lauderdale metro area saw a notable upswing in the third quarter, signaling a promising future for South Florida startups. According to PitchBook data, the region secured $754 million across 92 deals in the third quarter, up nearly 25% from $608 million from 75 deals in the previous quarter. The average deal size also increased slightly to $8.2 million.
The strong performance helped the region maintain its position as a national leader by deal count—ranking sixth alongside Austin, Texas—though it slipped to 11th in total venture capital dollars, just behind Seattle, Wash., and Atlanta, Ga.
The top funding rounds included $150 million for MaintainX, a Miami- and San Francisco-based industrial maintenance software startup, Fort Lauderdale biotech firm Syncromune’s $131.8 million and Miami’s cybersecurity developer Sola’s $35 million.
Other significant deals for Miami-based firms in sectors ranging from fleet services to precision medicine and gaming included the following:
- Meridian Fleet Services, $26.6 million
- FundKite, business funding and financial services for small and mid-sized businesses, $26.4 million
- Unrivaled Basketball, operator of the women’s basketball league, $26 million
- Spire Home Systems, developer of home automation systems, $23.3 million
- Imagene, maker of multi‑modal foundation models for precision medicine, $23 million
- MyPrize, multi-player casino gaming startup, $21 million
- Dispatch, data orchestration platform for wealth management, $18 million
The quarter also featured nine exits valued at $714 million. But the largest—Touchland’s $700 million exit—had an oversized influence on the total. Two major pending acquisitions could further boost the region’s exit value—vLex’s $1 billion deal to be acquired by Clio and Urbint’s $325 million acquisition by Itron. Both deals are expected to close by year-end.
Year-to-date data shows South Florida startups have already raised at least $2.77 billion, surpassing 2024’s total, with expectations that 2025 will mark the region’s strongest year since 2022. This growth is partially fueled by a surge in AI-related investments, which accounted for $830 million in the first half of 2025—42% of local VC activity—nearly matching the total AI investment Miami startups secured in all of 2024.
Florida Funders Partner Saxon Baum highlighted the transformative potential of AI, calling it “the most important and impactful technological revolution of the next several centuries.” He also pointed to recent legislative changes in Florida designed to broaden investor access to venture capital and ease regulations for fund managers, enhancing fundraising and portfolio growth opportunities.
Statewide, Florida drew $1.07 billion across 148 deals in Q3, slightly up from the prior quarter. The state has attracted nearly $3.37 billion across the first three quarters of the year, according to PitchBook, with independent tallies suggesting even higher totals of around $3.85 billion. South Florida remains the powerhouse within the state, responsible for around 70% of the deal value and 62% of deal counts.
Outside Miami-Fort Lauderdale, notable rounds included St. Petersburg’s Climate First Bank and Sarasota’s Tenex.AI, alongside strong activity in Orlando and Tampa metro areas, though these regions experienced some quarter-to-quarter fluctuations.
On the national scene, venture capital deployment remained steady in Q3, with $80.9 billion invested across 3,175 deals. AI continues to dominate, comprising nearly 40% of deal counts and over 64% of deal value in the U.S. for Q3.
[Noah Wire Services helped in writing of this article.]