Home Tech & AI Bengaluru food delivery startup Swish raises $38M: its third round in 18 months

Bengaluru food delivery startup Swish raises $38M: its third round in 18 months

by Amanda Lee


Swish, a Bengaluru-based food delivery startup, has raised $38 million in a new funding round, as the 18-month-old company continues to draw investor interest for its 10-minute fresh food delivery service.

The Series B round, led by Hara Global and Bain Capital Ventures, also saw participation from Accel, Stride Ventures, and Alteria Capital. It values Swish at $139 million post-money, more than double its valuation a year ago, and brings total funding to $54 million.

The funding comes as ultra-fast food delivery remains a challenging business to sustain in India. Larger platforms such as Swiggy, Zepto, and Zomato have in recent months scaled back or shut down their rapid-delivery experiments, citing operational complexity and cost pressures.

Founded in 2024, Swish operates a full-stack business model, owning its kitchens, supply chain, and delivery network, and focusing on dense, hyperlocal clusters with delivery radii of around 1 kilometer. This gives Swish better economics, it says, compared to marketplace platforms that must rely on third-party restaurant commissions.

The startup says it is now delivering about 20,000 orders a day, up from roughly 5,000 four months ago, as it expands across 10 micro-markets in Bengaluru. Swish has also focused on automating kitchen operations to support faster delivery and consistency, co-founder and CEO Aniket Shah (pictured above) said in an interview.

“We are very dense, very close to the customer, ensuring that we are able to almost act like a restaurant kitchen, bringing food to your table,” he told TechCrunch.

Swish offers more than 200 items across meals, snacks, and beverages, with an average order value of ₹200 to ₹250 (around $2–$3). It says usage is highly repeat-driven, with top users ordering more than 10 times a month, largely among young urban consumers aged 20 to 35, as it targets multiple daily food occasions from breakfast and tea-time to late-night orders.

Techcrunch event

San Francisco, CA
|
October 13-15, 2026

The startup’s older kitchen clusters have reached profitability, Shah said, although he did not disclose per-order margins.

Swish plans to expand within Bengaluru and into other areas like Delhi-NCR and Mumbai, Shah said.

Its business model, however, remains dependent on dense urban clusters and high-order volumes. So we’ll have to wait and see if investor enthusiasm proves justified, particularly as larger rivals have scaled back their rapid-delivery experiments.



Source link

You may also like

Follow us on:

© 2025 decentralnewshub.xyz. All rights reserved.

Sign up and save

Sign up and you’ll always be the first to know about any promotions, discounts or giveaways.

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!