Indian Fintech Fundraise Roundup
Compiled by FintechGyan | Week of March 28, 2026
Indian fintech continues to attract meaningful capital across lending, savings, healthcare finance, and B2B segments. Here are the top deals worth tracking this week.
🏆 Olyv Raises $23 Million in Series C
Personal finance and lending platform Olyv secured USD 23 million (~₹192 crore) in a Series C funding round. This is one of the larger consumer fintech rounds in recent months, signalling continued investor confidence in India’s digital lending space. Olyv offers credit, savings, and financial wellness products targeting underserved retail borrowers.
💰 Stable Money Bags $15 Million in New Round
Fixed-income investment platform Stable Money raised USD 15 million (~₹125 crore) in its latest funding round. The platform focuses on helping retail investors access fixed deposits and bonds from banks and NBFCs — a segment gaining traction as interest rates remain elevated. This raise signals strong investor appetite for wealthtech platforms serving the mass-affluent segment.
🏥 Care.fi Secures $8 Million for Healthcare Fintech
Care.fi, a startup focused on healthcare-linked financial products, raised USD 8 million (~₹67 crore). The company sits at the intersection of insurance, lending, and healthcare payments — a niche but fast-growing vertical in India. This funding will likely support product expansion and distribution partnerships with hospitals and clinics.
🏦 Mysa Raises $3.4 Million Led by Blume Ventures
B2B fintech startup Mysa closed a USD 3.4 million (~₹28 crore) round led by Blume Ventures and Piper Serica. Mysa targets the business banking and financial operations segment for SMEs. Blume’s participation adds strong institutional credibility to what is an early-stage but operationally focused play.
🌱 Bold Finance Closes $1.5 Million Seed Round
Early-stage lending startup Bold Finance raised USD 1.5 million (~₹12.5 crore) in seed funding. While details on its exact model remain limited, the raise reflects continued seed-stage activity in India’s credit infrastructure space.
📊 Macro Context
These deals align with broader trends: Indian FinTech funding hit a 5-quarter high at end of 2025, with capital jumping 3.8x quarter-on-quarter per FinTech Global data. India also ranked third globally in fintech funding in 2025 with $2.4 billion raised, per Tracxn.
FintechGyan Takeaway: Deal flow is broad-based — spanning lending, wealthtech, B2B payments, and health finance — suggesting sector maturity rather than concentration risk. MFDs and IFAs should watch platforms like Stable Money closely, as they increasingly compete for the same fixed-income investor wallet.