Eight months. Twelve people. $50 million in funding.
That is the speed at which SolveAI, a London-based AI startup, has gone from incorporation to one of the most talked-about enterprise software raises in the UK this year.
And the idea behind it is deceptively simple: what if any employee could build production-ready software just by describing the problem?
SolveAI emerged from stealth this week with a $45 million Series A led by GV (Google Ventures) and a previously undisclosed $5 million pre-seed round led by Accel. Other investors include Northzone, Mantis VC, and NeverLift, alongside angel backers from Palantir, Google DeepMind, and OpenAI.
The company is headquartered in Chancery Lane, London, and operates across North America and Europe.
What SolveAI Actually Does
If you have been following the AI coding tool space, you will know it is getting crowded. Cursor is valued at $29.3 billion. Lovable sits at $6.6 billion. But most of these tools are built for developers or hobbyists working outside enterprise constraints.
SolveAI is going after a different market entirely.
The platform lets employees across any department describe a business problem in plain language. From there, it generates a written proposal outlining the recommended solution and its features, followed by a technical specification covering data integrations and system requirements. Teams review and iterate on the proposal. Then SolveAI orchestrates specialised AI agents responsible for different stages of development, including UX, frontend, and backend, to deliver a complete custom application.
The key difference? Every output integrates with existing enterprise infrastructure, including tools like SAP, Salesforce, GitHub, Snowflake, and ServiceNow, while meeting compliance and governance standards from the start.
The Founder Behind It
Steve Basher spent eight years at Palantir before founding SolveAI in July 2025 as a first-time solo founder. His experience there shaped the company's core thesis.
At Palantir, Basher saw how bespoke software could solve hard operational problems for large organisations. But building that software required specialised engineering teams and lengthy timelines. Most enterprises simply could not move fast enough.
SolveAI's approach is to capture a company's full context, from system architecture and compliance rules to internal processes, and use that understanding to generate software that actually works in production. The company employs forward-deployed engineers who work directly with clients to deeply understand their systems before the AI builds anything.
Why This Matters for UK Tech
This raise is another strong signal that London continues to attract serious international venture capital for early-stage AI companies. A $45 million Series A from GV for a seven-month-old startup is not something that happens every day.
SolveAI's 12-person team includes senior hires from Palantir, ElevenLabs, and Meta, and the company plans to quadruple headcount through 2026. Companies in manufacturing, retail, and financial services are already exploring the platform.
The timing is significant. With UK tech incorporations hitting record highs and the country ranking as the world's second most attractive investment destination, SolveAI's raise fits into a broader pattern of investor confidence in London's AI ecosystem.
The Competitive Landscape
SolveAI is entering a hypercompetitive space. But where most AI coding tools help developers write code faster, SolveAI is betting on a different thesis entirely: that the future of enterprise software will be built by the people who actually use it.
Accel investor Cecilia Wang has described this shift as structural, noting that the teams closest to operational problems need a compliant way to bring AI into their workflow.
Tom Hulme, managing partner at GV, has pointed to SolveAI's understanding of how enterprises actually write and deploy software as a key differentiator. The nuance of moving from prototypes to scalable, compliant production systems is where most AI coding tools fall short.
For founders building in the enterprise AI space, SolveAI's rapid fundraise is worth studying. It shows that investors are willing to back opinionated products that solve a specific, painful problem, even at very early stages.
Key Takeaways
The numbers tell the story. SolveAI raised $50 million in eight months, with GV and Accel leading the rounds. The company is London-based, 12 people strong, and targeting a gap that most AI startups in the UK are not addressing: enterprise-grade, compliant software built by non-developers.
Whether SolveAI can deliver on its promise remains to be seen. But the bet is clear. And the investors backing it are not small names.
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