Investments in French AI Companies Nearly Doubled in 2024
French artificial intelligence (AI) have witnessed a healthy growth rate as far as investments are concerned in 2024 but they still lagged behind the UK and Germany for the amount of venture capital raised overall.
According to a latest report from French investor Alexandre Dewez entitled “State of French Tech Ecosystem 2024,” French AI companies saw investment jump 82% in the past year, from $1.03 billion in 2023 to $1.95 billion in 2024.
This helped Paris retain its position as second-best European city for AI start-up investment, with only London ahead. France also has a rich ecosystem of 760+ AI start-ups across the entire value chain from foundation models to infrastructure & applications, the report said.
Under President Emmanuel Macron, France has positioned itself as a key hub for EU innovation, attracting investment from big tech companies like Amazon and Microsoft, while promising to champion home-grown start-ups like Mistral.
However, with $7.28 billion raised across 518 funding rounds overall, France remained in third place in Europe. By comparison, start-ups in Germany raised $9.64 billion, while the UK start-ups secured $16.82 billion. Total start-up funding in France grew 3% from 2023, indicating the country’s ecosystem has recovered from the 2023 correction.
“AI has been the main driver of investments in French tech, accounting for 27% of total funding raised by local start-ups and Paris has become a global AI hub for six key reasons,” the report said, citing top engineering schools, government-backed tax breaks and the local presence of big tech companies like Google and Meta.
“The best AI founders tend to combine multiple of these criteria: a top engineering school, research background, serial entrepreneur [or have] spent time at a top tech company,” the report noted.
Founders and Foreign Investors
A growing number of start-ups comprising nearly 2,000 veterans of French unicorns such as digital advertising platform Criteo, online retailer Veepee and healthtech Doctolib have seen unicorn alumni quitting to start their own companies, launching a new generation of tech start-ups.
These companies created a compounding flywheel for the ecosystem with 1,900 alumni from French unicorns becoming entrepreneurs, the report said.
Competition to invest in French start-ups is high, with leading venture firms such as Accel, Index and Balderton all participating in one or two fundraising rounds annually.
However, the report suggested few billion-dollar start-ups in France were ready to go public, describing the local IPO market as broken for tech companies.
“European-focused players like Qonto and Doctolib will stay private as long as they can, while more international players like Contentsquare and Dataiku will probably go public in the US if they choose to go public,” the report added.